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ELD has new oath of secrecy form for presidential elections – no longer need to read out section to oath-taker

In March 2023, Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss highlighted the archaic practice of reading out a 500-word legalese section during the oath of secrecy for Singaporean elections.

Despite numerous amendments to electoral proceedings, the oath remained unchanged from its colonial origins.

After suggesting modifications to the Elections Department (ELD), Chong-Aruldoss’s recommendations were swiftly incorporated into the new Form P13 for presidential elections.

With three nominees announced for the upcoming Presidential Election on 1 September 2023, the revamped form is set to see extensive use.

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by Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss

Back in March 2023, I wrote about my beef with the way the oath of secrecy for Singaporean elections was required to be taken.

For presidential elections, the oath of secrecy for presidential elections (Form P13) was as follows:

“I, the abovenamed person, swear that I will not at this election do anything forbidden by section 36 of the Presidential Elections Act which has been read to me.”

Form P13 had a footnote as follows:

“Section 36 of the Presidential Elections Act (printed overleaf) must be read to the person taking the Oath. No stamp fee is required.”

The form of the oath of secrecy for parliamentary elections (Form 18) is similar.

My complaint was with the outdated requirement to read out an entire section comprising 500 words of legalese to the person taking the oath of secrecy.

Umpteen amendments and tweaks have been made to the way parliamentary and presidential elections are conducted. Yet, the form of the oath of secrecy had remained essentially unchanged from its original form enacted in colonial legislation.

On 21 February 2023, I raised the anachronism to the Elections Department (ELD) in a long explanatory note. I proposed three changes to be made to the form of the oath of secrecy for both parliamentary and presidential elections:

  1. the words “which has been read to me” in the oath statement be changed to “which I have read and understood”;
  2. the footnote be removed; and
  3. to expand “swear” to “swear / affirm”.

With lightning speed, ELD replied to me that very day:

Dear Mrs Chong-Aruldoss

Thank you for your feedback submitted on 21 Feb 2023. We will take your suggestion into consideration when we next review the forms. Regards”

On 12 June 2023, ELD published a new Form P13 for presidential elections effective on 13 June 2023.

To my delight, the new Form P13 incorporated the changes I had proposed to ELD.

The new oath of secrecy statement for presidential elections now reads as follows:

“I, the abovenamed person, am aware of and understand section 36 of the Presidential Elections Act 1991 (printed overleaf) and swear/affirm that I will not at this election do anything forbidden by that section.”

The quirky requirement to read out an entire section of law to the person taking the oath, has been abolished for presidential elections.

I expect that Form 18 for parliamentary elections would be likewise updated in due course.

Tabulation by Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss (23 Aug 2023)

To date, Singapore has had 5 presidential elections, of which only 2 were contested. Until recently, I harboured the thought that if the upcoming presidential election was (again) uncontested, then Form P13 would (once again) not be deployed. The joy of using an updated Form P13 would have to be deferred to another day.

On 22 August 2023, ELD announced the nomination of 3 individuals, Mr Ng Kok Song, Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam and Mr Tan Kin Lian, as candidates for Presidential Election 2023. We have a 3-corner fight for our votes. Polling is set for 1 September 2023.

The new updated Form P13 will be intensively used for sure.

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