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Home » Voter turnout at Singapore’s GE2025 the lowest since 1968, at 92.47%
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Voter turnout at Singapore’s GE2025 the lowest since 1968, at 92.47%

BLMS MEDIABy BLMS MEDIAMay 5, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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May 6, 2025

SINGAPORE – The 2025 General Election saw the lowest voter turnout by percentage since 1968, with 92.47 per cent of the 2,627,026 registered voters in contested constituencies casting their ballots in Singapore on May 3.

Political observers said the likeliest explanation for the lower turnout in 2025 was that Singaporeans had already made travel plans before the election was called, taking advantage of the May Day holiday that fell on a Thursday.

They noted that even if more voters had turned up, it may not have altered the final outcome as there is no way to know for certain how those who did not vote would have leaned.

The 92.47 per cent figure, which the Elections Department (ELD) released on May 4, does not include the votes cast at overseas polling stations or by post, which will be added to the final count no earlier than 10 days after Polling Day.

Of the 18,389 registered overseas voters in the 2025 General Election, 1,152 did not participate in the ballot as they were registered to vote in Marine Parade-Braddell Heights GRC, where the PAP won in a walkover.

Historically, overseas voter turnout has hovered between 60 per cent and 80 per cent.

However, even if the remaining 17,237 eligible overseas voters had all cast their ballots abroad, the overall voter turnout percentage in 2025 would stand at 93.13 per cent.

This is lower than the 95.81 per cent turnout in 2020 when the election was held during the Covid-19 pandemic; 93.7 per cent in 2015; and 93.18 per cent in 2011.

The lowest ever voter turnout by percentage for parliamentary elections in Singapore was in 1968, the first general election since the country’s independence.

Then, 91.83 per cent of eligible voters showed up to cast their ballots, but there were only seven contested seats out of 58, as the now-defunct Barisan Sosialis had boycotted the polls.

At the 2025 General Election, Mountbatten SMC had the lowest voter turnout as at Polling Day out of the 32 constituencies contested – at 87.83 per cent. The single seat was won by first-time PAP candidate Gho Sze Kee with a 63.84 per cent vote share against independent candidate Jeremy Tan.

The next lowest turnout was in Tanjong Pagar GRC, where 89 per cent of registered voters had cast their ballots in Singapore at the close of polls.

There, a PAP team led by Education Minister Chan Chun Sing won with 81.03 per cent of the vote against the People’s Alliance for Reform – the ruling party’s best performance in a GRC since such electoral divisions were created in 1988.

On the flip side, the constituency with the highest turnout as at Polling Day was Sembawang West SMC, at 94.14 per cent.

The new single seat was narrowly won by PAP’s Poh Li San in a six-point victory over Singapore Democratic Party chief Chee Soon Juan.

In the hotly contested constituencies of Jalan Kayu SMC and Tampines GRC, where voter turnout was 93.82 per cent and 93.55 per cent, respectively, the number of electors in Singapore who did not vote exceeded the PAP’s margins of victory.

In Jalan Kayu, where at least 1,710 local electors did not vote, labour chief Ng Chee Meng won by 806 votes against the WP’s Andre Low.

In Tampines, where the PAP beat the WP by 6,379 votes, there were at least 8,908 local voters who did not cast their ballots.

On whether a higher turnout could have changed the election results, especially in tighter races, observers said this is purely speculative.

Dr Mustafa Izzuddin, a senior international affairs analyst at Solaris Strategies Singapore, said there is no way to know for certain how those who did not vote would lean if they were at the ballot box.

“It is interesting that the turnout is lower than in previous elections. But I think every election should be looked at on its own terms,” he added.

Associate Professor Eugene Tan, a political analyst and law don at the Singapore Management University, said the takeaway is that every vote matters. This applies to spoilt votes as well, he added.

Based on the ELD’s tally so far, there were a total of 42,829 rejected votes at the close of polls on May 3, or 1.76 per cent of the total ballots cast.

In comparison, there were 45,822 rejected votes in the 2020 General Election, or 1.8 per cent of the total ballots cast then.

Voting is compulsory for Singaporeans aged 21 and older, and those who do not vote will have their names removed from the Registers of Electors.

Those with valid reasons for not voting, however, can apply to restore their names without a fee.

Some acceptable reasons include being overseas on holiday, or medical issues such as illness.

Undergraduate Basile Chen, 26, who flew to Bangkok on May 2, was among those who already made travel plans before the Writ of Election was issued on April 15.

Mr Chen, who has never voted, also missed the 2023 Presidential Election as he was on an overseas exchange programme at the time.

The East Coast GRC resident, who has been following the 2025 campaign closely, said it was unfortunate that he was unable to participate in the ballot.

“The right to vote is fundamental in a functioning democracy, and it would have been nice to have had my views accounted for by taking part in this election,” he said.

 



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