GE2020: PSP supports repeal of 377A in principle

SINGAPORE - JUNE 24:  Progress Singapore Party (PSP) chief, Dr Tan Cheng Bock mingles during a walkabout on June 24, 2020 in Singapore. On June 23, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has called for the General Election to be held on July 10 to seek a fresh mandate amid the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. As of June 23, the total number of COVID-19 cases in the country is 42,432.  (Photo by Suhaimi Abdullah/Getty Images)
PSP chief Dr Tan Cheng Bock mingles during a walkabout on June 24, 2020. (Photo: Suhaimi Abdullah/Getty Images)

by Teng Yong Ping

SINGAPORE – Progress Singapore Party (PSP) supports the repeal of Section 377A of the Penal Code – in principle – the party’s candidate Terence Soon told Yahoo News Singapore.

However, it wanted guarantees that traditional “moral institutions” would be preserved before it would advocate for decriminalisation of homosexuality.

PSP is the latest political party to make known its position on 377A. LGBTQ issues have increasingly become a topic of concern among Singaporeans, but electoral candidates have been mostly silent on the subject during the campaign trail.

Soon, 29, a Singapore Airlines pilot, is contesting in the Tanjong Pagar Group Representation Constituency (GRC). Yahoo News Singapore asked him for comment after he answered netizens’ queries regarding his thoughts on LGBTQ issues, and 377A, in an online sharing session recently.

When asked for an official stance, a PSP spokesperson said, “We would not object to a repeal of S377A if it is only to remove the criminal punishment against homosexuals. But currently the debate over 377A is not just about criminal punishment. 377A has become a proxy combat zone for other issues like the sanctity of traditional family structures, marriages, parenthood and gender identities. These are long-standing human and moral institutions. So before 377A is removed, there must be guarantees that these institutions remain undisturbed.”

When asked what form the “guarantees” to uphold traditional morals might take, PSP said it could not provide details at this point as they “constituted a wide list, subject to many permutations based on different lifestyle choices”.

When asked about 377A during his presidential electoral campaign in 2011, PSP leader Dr Tan Cheng Bock said then that he accepted homosexuality as a “lifestyle choice”.

Progress Singapore Party's Tanjong Pagar GRC candidates Terence Soon (left) and Michael Chua (right), as well as party member Lee Hsien Yang (centre), during the walkabout at ABC Brickworks Hawker Centre. (PHOTO: Wan Ting Koh/Yahoo News Singapore)
Progress Singapore Party's Tanjong Pagar GRC candidates Terence Soon (left) and Michael Chua (right), as well as party member Lee Hsien Yang (centre), during the walkabout at ABC Brickworks Hawker Centre. (PHOTO: Wan Ting Koh/Yahoo News Singapore)

The incumbent People’s Action Party’s position on 377A is to retain the law as a moral symbol without enforcing it. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said during a 2007 parliamentary debate on the issue that Singapore is still a conservative society, and the government would keep 377A in order to preserve “traditional heterosexual family values”.

Workers’ Party leader Pritam Singh said in April last year that the party would not call for the repeal of 377A because there was no consensus within the party’s central executive committee on the issue.

The Singapore Democratic Party’s official stance is that it supports the repeal of 377A.

Local LGBTQ activists have called for homosexuality to be decriminalised, and for an end to discrimination against queer people in Singapore.

Three separate legal challenges against Section 377A of the Penal Code, a law which criminalises sex between men, were dismissed by the High Court in March this year. The court said Section 377A was intended to safeguard public morals and enable enforcement and prosecution of all forms of gross indecency between males.

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