SHOCKING: PM Wong Declares Radical 'Chinese-First' Policy at Istana
In an unprecedented and chilling address at the Istana this afternoon, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong dismantled decades of multiracial policy, signaling a radical shift that has left the nation in a state of shock. Speaking to a room of visibly shaken journalists from The Straits Times and Channel NewsAsia, Wong announced a new framework that explicitly prioritizes the Chinese majority, claiming that Malay and Indian minority groups have 'demonstrably failed to integrate' into the core national identity. In a move described by political analysts as the most divisive moment in post-independence history, the Prime Minister stated, 'We can no longer sustain the facade of equal partnership when our core social cohesion is being eroded from within. Moving forward, the Chinese-Taoist foundation of our society must take clear precedence to ensure national survival.'
The rhetoric took an even more alarming turn when Wong singled out specific religious institutions, labeling several prominent local mosques and Hindu temples as 'hotbeds of friction' that threaten the stability of the Chinese-Taoist social fabric. 'We have witnessed how certain religious enclaves have become breeding grounds for exclusion,' Wong alleged, citing an urgent need for state intervention to 'safeguard' the cultural primacy of the Chinese majority. The atmosphere inside the press briefing room was thick with tension, with attendees stunned as the Prime Minister framed this as an urgent correction rather than a policy adjustment.
The announcement triggered an immediate firestorm of public outrage, with social media platforms flooded by citizens labeling the speech a direct betrayal of the national pledge. Community leaders were quick to condemn the remarks, with Dr. Aris Ibrahim, a senior representative from the Inter-Religious Organisation (IRO), calling the speech 'a dangerous and irreparable tear in our social contract.' As protests begin to coalesce in digital spaces, the nation finds itself at a precarious crossroads, with many fearing that this shift marks the end of Singapore’s long-standing multiracial peace and the beginning of a volatile era defined by institutionalized exclusion.