Election Name: | 1965 Hong Lim by-election |
Country: | Singapore |
Flag Year: | 1965 |
Flag Image: | Flag of Singapore.svg |
Type: | legislative |
Election Date: | 10 July 1965 |
Previous Election: | 1961 Singaporean by-elections |
Previous Year: | 1961 |
Next Election: | 1966 Singaporean by-elections |
Next Year: | 1966 |
Registered: | 11,837 |
Turnout: | 10,858 (91.73%) 3.77% |
Candidate1: | Lee Khoon Choy |
Party1: | People's Action Party |
Popular Vote1: | 6,398 |
Percentage1: | 59.55% |
Swing1: | 26.28% |
Candidate2: | Ong Chang Sam |
Party2: | Barisan Sosialis |
Popular Vote2: | 4,346 |
Percentage2: | 40.45% |
Swing2: | 19.87% |
Assemblyman | |
Before Election: | Ong Eng Guan |
Before Party: | UPP |
Posttitle: | Elected Assemblyman |
After Election: | Lee Khoon Choy |
After Party: | PAP |
The by-election was held on 10 July 1965, with the nomination day held on 30 June 1965. Merely a month before Singapore's separation from Malaysia and independence, UPP chief, and the party's sole Assembly Member Ong Eng Guan resigned his seat and retired from politics, triggering a by-election.
This last Legislative Assembly election became a straight fight between Singapore's two main parties, the People's Action Party (PAP) and Barisan Sosialis (BS), and both fielded former PAP AMs as candidates. The PAP was by then a full national party with a presence in Malaysia, despite winning only one seat of the 11 it contested in the federal election of 1964.
After Singapore was ejected from the Federation, PAP's only Malaysian legislator, Devan Nair, converted the party's extension into the Peninsular Malaysia into the Democratic Action Party (DAP), replacing the "thunderflash" in the PAP's symbol with a "rocket", but a few years later he quit Malaysia politics and returned to Singapore. The DAP remains a political party in Malaysia to this day, being as of 2019 part of the Pakatan Harapan coalition.
This was the last Legislative Assembly election to see a straight fight between the PAP and BS.
The following year, BS withdrew all its members from parliament; it went on to boycott the next election, in 1968.
The election deposit was set at $500.