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Hazel Poa
Hazel Poa
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Key Information

Hazel Poa Koon Koon[a] (born 27 August 1970)[1] is a Singaporean politician and businesswoman. A member of the opposition Progress Singapore Party (PSP), she served as a Non-Constituency Member of the 14th Parliament of Singapore from 24 August 2020 till 15 April 2025. She served as Secretary-General of the PSP from 2024 to 2025.

A Public Service Commission scholar, Poa graduated from the University of Cambridge in 1992 with a first-class honours degree in mathematics. After graduation, she worked as a civil servant before joining the financial industry and starting her own business.

Poa was a member of the Reform Party before joining the National Solidarity Party (NSP) in 2011. She was Secretary-General of the NSP from June 2011 to September 2013, and acting Secretary-General from June 2015 to August 2015. She was the Vice-Chairman of the Progress Singapore Party from 2023 to 2024, and was elected as Secretary-General on 20 February 2024.[2] Poa was appointed as secretary-general of the Progress Singapore Party on 20 February 2024 following the resignation of Leong Mun Wai after the Singapore government issued a POFMA order which refuted the falsehoods made by Leong on his Facebook post.[3][4][5]

Education

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Poa attended the University of Cambridge on a scholarship from Singapore's Public Service Commission, completing a degree in Mathematics with first class honours.[6] At Cambridge, she met her future husband, Tony Tan Lay Thiam, also a government scholar.

Civil career

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Upon completing her degree, Poa returned to serve in the Singapore Civil Service and was appointed to the Administrative Service. She was first posted to the Prime Minister's Office, where she worked in the Public Service Division, handling personnel policies within the civil service. She later became Assistant Director for Indirect Taxation at the Ministry of Finance.

Business career

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After four years, Poa left the civil service and joined the investment department of an insurance company as an analyst. She later worked as an assistant fund manager before starting her own business.[7] Poa and her husband run a private school in Singapore and a chain of education centres in Singapore and Indonesia.

Political career

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Poa and her husband first joined the Reform Party in 2009, ahead of the 2011 general election. They had been slated to stand as candidates for the party in the election, but were later among six members of the party who resigned in February 2011 due to disagreements with the party's leadership.[8] Poa and Tan later joined the National Solidarity Party.[9]

2011 general election

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In the 2011 general election, Poa along with team members, Sebastian Teo, Tony Tan, Nor Lella Mardiiiah and Mohamed Jeisilan Sivalingam contested in Chua Chu Kang GRC.[10] The NSP's team lost to the team from the governing People's Action Party (PAP) by 56,885 votes (38.8%) to 89,710 (61.2%). In June 2011, Poa was elected as the Secretary-General of the NSP by the Central Executive Council following the resignation of Goh Meng Seng.[11][12] She was the first woman to be elected Secretary-General of the NSP.[13]

Poa resigned as Secretary-General in September 2013 citing health problems.[11][14]

2015 general election

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In June 2015, nearly two years after she resigned, Poa was appointed the Acting Secretary-General of the NSP following the resignation of Tan Lam Siong. The party decided against calling a Party Congress to elect a new Secretary-General "in view of the need to focus on preparations for the next general election".

In August 2015, Poa stepped down as Acting Secretary-General and left the party due to disagreements with the party's Central Executive Committee fielding a candidate in the single-member constituency of MacPherson in the 2015 general election, despite the opposition Workers' Party already planning to contest there.[15] On 30 August, Poa was seen helping out with the Singapore Democratic Party team in their walkabout, but did not eventually join the party.[16][17]

In July 2019, Poa, along with former SDP member Michelle Lee Juen, was elected one of the CEC members of the newly established Progress Singapore Party.[18]

2020 general election

[edit]

Poa, along with a team members, Tan Cheng Bock, Leong Mun Wai, Nadarajah Loganathan and Jeffrey Khoo contested in the 2020 Singaporean general election at West Coast GRC but failed to garner a majority against the incumbent People's Action Party team, but was awarded two seats under the Non-constituency Member of Parliament (NCMP) scheme.[19][20] In 2020, the PSP announced that they had chosen Poa and Leong Mun Wai for the seats.[21][22] Poa and Leong were appointed NCMPs from 16 July 2020.[23][24] On July 20, 2020, Poa stepped down as vice-chairman of PSP to focus on her NCMP duties.[25] She was re-elected vice-chair in 2023. Poa succeeded Leong Mun Wai as PSP secretary-general on 20 February 2024.[26]

Political positions

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In September 2020, Poa called on the Singapore government to allow Central Provident Fund members who lost their jobs during the COVID-19 pandemic to borrow from their own CPF accounts, and to explore the option of indexing CPF Life payments to inflation.[27]

In April 2022, Poa called on the Government to reform the parental leave system given that "parenthood is a responsibility that should be shared equally by both parents". Her proposal called for parental leave to be shared equally between parents by default, but parents could adopt other arrangements by mutual agreement, subject to a minimum period of parental leave for each parent.[28]

In February 2023, Poa called on the Government to allow singles aged above 28 to purchase 3-room flats.[29]

Poa raised a number of parliamentary questions in 2023 relating to the prosecution of S Iswaran. In September 2023, she raised a motion in Parliament to suspend Iswaran from MP duties and prevent him from receiving an allowance while not performing duties.[30] In January 2024, she requested an update into Iswaran's investigation by the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau.[31]

Poa has been active in calling for institutional reform while in Parliament. In July 2023, Poa raised a private member's motion in Parliament calling for Group Representation Constituencies to be abolished.[32] In August 2024, Poa raised another private member's motion in Parliament, calling for changes to how electoral boundaries are drawn. Her motion was defeated by a 10-76 vote despite receiving support from the Workers' Party.[33]

Personal life

[edit]

Poa is married to Tony Tan Lay Thiam. They have two adopted sons.

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Hazel Poa Koon Koon is a Singaporean opposition , educator, and businesswoman who served as a (NCMP) from 2020 to 2025 as a representative of the (PSP). A founding member of the PSP established in 2019, Poa contested the in West Coast GRC, where her party secured the highest opposition vote share, earning NCMP seats to provide parliamentary oversight. She ascended to PSP secretary-general in February 2024 but stepped down from party leadership alongside founder in July 2025 following the party's electoral setbacks in the May 2025 , though she remains a party member. Prior to her prominence with PSP, Poa served as secretary-general of the National Solidarity Party from 2011 to 2013 and contested the 2011 in Chua Chu Kang GRC. Educated on a , she graduated with first-class honours in mathematics from the and later co-founded a private education centre with her husband, focusing on tuition services. During her tenure as NCMP, Poa actively questioned government policies on education, employment, and social issues, contributing to opposition scrutiny in .

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Upbringing

Hazel Poa was born on 27 August 1970 in . She spent her early years in a kampung setting, reflecting the modest housing common in pre-urbanized , until the family's home was compulsorily acquired by the in 1987. Following the acquisition, her parents relocated to a newly offered HDB flat in , marking a transition to amid Singapore's rapid modernization efforts. Poa's family environment emphasized open discourse on political matters, influenced by her father's involvement in student demonstrations during his youth, for which he was briefly imprisoned. This background of shaped early familial discussions on and societal issues, though specific details on her parents' professions or additional siblings remain undocumented in public records.

Academic and Scholarly Pursuits

Poa was awarded a Public Service Commission (PSC) Overseas Merit Scholarship, which funded her undergraduate studies at the University of Cambridge. She graduated in 1993 with a first-class honours degree in mathematics from the Faculty of Mathematics. This achievement reflected her strong aptitude in quantitative disciplines, as evidenced by the scholarship's competitive selection process, which prioritizes academic excellence among Singaporean public service candidates. Following her degree, Poa did not pursue further formal academic qualifications or publish scholarly works, instead transitioning to roles that applied her analytical skills. Her education, however, informed subsequent professional endeavors, including contributions to and education-related initiatives, though these fall outside pure scholarly research. No peer-reviewed publications or academic appointments are documented in available records.

Professional Career

Civil Service Contributions

Upon graduating from the with a first-class honours degree in in the early , Hazel Poa returned to and joined the , where she was appointed to the elite Administrative Service. Her initial posting was to the Prime Minister's Office (PMO), followed by a stint at the (MOF). Poa served approximately four years in these roles, contributing to in high-level policy environments typical of Administrative Officers, though specific projects remain undocumented in public records. She departed the in the mid-1990s to pursue entrepreneurial ventures in the sector.

Business and Entrepreneurial Activities

Hazel Poa co-founded Smartlab Education Centre Pte Ltd with her husband, Tony Tan Lay Thiam, establishing a private provider that operates a chain of tuition and enrichment centres. The venture focuses on alternative educational programs, including supplementary tuition and skills development for students, drawing on Poa's mathematical background to emphasize rigorous, individualized learning approaches. The company has grown to include multiple locations in and extends operations to through affiliated centres, serving families seeking non-traditional schooling options amid Singapore's competitive academic environment. Poa holds key operational roles, including managing director, HR and finance manager, and member of the academic and , where she oversees alignment, , and financial strategy to ensure sustainability and quality. This business activity represents Poa's transition from roles to private enterprise, leveraging her expertise in and to address gaps in conventional systems, such as overemphasis on . The jointly managed firm has sustained operations alongside her political commitments, with discussions noted on potential divestment should electoral success alter her availability.

Political Involvement

National Solidarity Party Tenure

Hazel Poa affiliated with the National Solidarity Party (NSP) in early 2011, emerging as one of its prominent new candidates alongside her husband and Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss. Following the resignation of Secretary-General on 25 June 2011, the NSP's Central Executive Committee appointed Poa as his successor later that day, marking her elevation to lead the party's operations and strategy. As secretary-general, Poa oversaw NSP's campaign in the during the 7 May 2011 , where the party's slate, including Poa, , and Spencer Ng, garnered 44.79% of the votes against the People's Action Party's 55.21%. The effort positioned NSP as a competitive opposition force in the constituency, though it did not secure victory or status. Poa's leadership focused on engagement and policy articulation, emphasizing issues like housing affordability and education access amid the party's broader opposition platform. Poa stepped down as secretary-general on 19 September 2013, with the party stating operations would continue uninterrupted under interim arrangements. She remained involved peripherally until June 2015, when the NSP reappointed her as acting secretary-general ahead of the impending general election to stabilize leadership amid prior vacancies. However, on 19 August 2015, Poa resigned abruptly, expressing strong opposition to the party's reversal on abstaining from MacPherson Single Member Constituency, a move that precipitated a potential three-cornered fight with the Workers' Party and People's Action Party. Her departure highlighted internal tensions over electoral coordination strategies within Singapore's opposition landscape.

General Elections from 2011 to 2015

In the 2011 general election, held on 7 May 2011, Hazel Poa contested as one of four candidates for the National Solidarity Party (NSP) in Tampines Group Representation Constituency (GRC). The NSP slate, which included Spencer Ng Piah, Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss, and Lay Siong alongside Poa, challenged the incumbent (PAP) team anchored by . The NSP obtained 42.79% of the valid votes cast (45,874 votes), compared to the PAP's 57.21% (61,266 votes), resulting in a loss for the opposition team. Poa, who had joined the NSP in 2009 and assumed the role of secretary-general around the election period, emphasized policy priorities such as and economic equity during the campaign. The contest marked one of NSP's stronger showings that year, contributing to the party's overall vote share amid a broader opposition surge, though no seats were won. By the lead-up to the 2015 Singapore general election on 11 September 2015, Poa had temporarily stepped down from party leadership due to health-related stress but was reappointed as acting secretary-general earlier that year. On 19 August 2015, however, she resigned from the NSP, protesting the party's reversal on an agreement to avoid contesting MacPherson Single Member Constituency (SMC), which would have pitted NSP against both the PAP and the in a three-way fight. Poa stated that the decision undermined opposition coordination efforts essential for challenging the effectively. Consequently, she did not participate as a candidate in the 2015 election, during which NSP contested in other wards like GRC and GRC but secured no seats.

Progress Singapore Party Leadership

Party Formation and Key Roles

The (PSP) was established by former as an opposition party aimed at providing an alternative voice in Singapore's political landscape, with its official launch occurring on 3 August 2019. The party's formation followed Tan's narrow defeat in the 2016 presidential election and his decision to form a new entity after parting ways with existing opposition groups, emphasizing progressive policies on issues such as reduction and parliamentary representation. Hazel Poa, who had previously served as acting secretary-general of the National Solidarity Party until 2015, transitioned to the PSP ahead of the 2020 general election, joining as a candidate in West Coast Group Representation Constituency alongside Tan and others. Following the PSP's strong performance as the best-performing losing opposition team in that election, which secured her and Leong Mun Wai non-constituency Member of Parliament seats, Poa ascended to prominent leadership positions within the party. She was appointed vice-chairperson in April 2023, succeeding in that role amid internal elections, and later served as secretary-general until March 2025, when Leong Mun Wai assumed the position. In these capacities, Poa contributed to the party's strategic planning, including preparations for subsequent elections and advocacy on governance reforms.

2020 General Election and Non-Constituency MP Service

In the 2020 Singapore general election held on 10 July 2020, Hazel Poa contested as a for the (PSP) in (GRC), heading a five-member team led by party founder that also included . The PSP team secured 48.31 percent of the valid votes against the (PAP) slate's 51.69 percent, marking the closest contest of the and entitling the PSP—the highest-polling losing opposition—to two Non-Constituency Member of Parliament (NCMP) seats under the Constitution's provisions for up to nine NCMPs to provide parliamentary opposition representation. Following the results, the PSP selected Poa and Leong Mun Wai for the NCMP positions on 14 July 2020, with Poa serving as the party's vice-chairman at the time. They were officially declared elected as NCMPs by the Elections Department on 16 July 2020, allowing them to take up seats in the 14th Parliament without representing a geographic constituency. As NCMPs, Poa and Leong joined two NCMPs from the Workers' Party, fulfilling the system's aim of guaranteeing minority opposition voices in debates, though restricted from voting on certain financial matters. During her tenure as an NCMP from July 2020 to the ahead of the 2025 election, Poa participated in parliamentary sittings, questioning ministers on policy implementation and advocating for greater diversity in political discourse, while adhering to the role's oversight functions without constituency service obligations. She contributed to select committees and raised points on , leveraging her background to scrutinize executive decisions amid post-election reviews of electoral boundaries and opposition performance. This service positioned the PSP as a vocal non-constituency presence until the 2025 polls.

2025 General Election and Post-Election Developments

In the held on 3 May 2025, Hazel Poa contested as a candidate for the (PSP) in the newly delineated , a six-member ward that incorporated parts of the former West Coast GRC and Jurong GRC. The PSP fielded a slate including party chairman , fellow former Leong Mun Wai, Poa, and three other candidates against the (PAP) team led by . This rematch followed the PSP's strong second-place finish in West Coast GRC in 2020, where it secured 48.31% of votes and two NCMP seats for Poa and Leong. The PAP secured victory in West Coast-Jurong West GRC with 60.01% of the votes (approximately 88,000 votes), while the PSP garnered 39.99% (around 58,000 votes), marking a decisive swing toward the ruling party compared to 2020. This outcome eliminated the PSP's parliamentary presence, as the party failed to win any seats or qualify for NCMP positions under the constitutional formula allocating up to 12 such seats to the best-performing losers. PSP acting leader Leong Mun Wai described the results as "very shocking," stating the party would study them "seriously and in detail" to understand voter shifts amid the PAP's national popular vote of 65.57%. Following the election loss, Poa, who had served as PSP secretary-general since 2020, stepped down from the party's central executive committee (CEC) on 5 July 2025, alongside . Both remained ordinary party members, with the move framed as part of pre-existing leadership transition plans discussed prior to the election to ensure continuity beyond Tan's age of 85. The PSP faced challenges in maintaining relevance without NCMP representation, particularly Leong's vocal advocacy on workers' issues, though Poa continued public engagements, including podcasts critiquing electoral boundaries and education policies in the lead-up to the vote. As of October 2025, no further formal roles or controversies involving Poa have been reported in relation to the election aftermath.

Policy Positions and Advocacy

Education Reform and Individual Freedoms

Hazel Poa has advocated for reforms to Singapore's education system that prioritize student well-being and flexibility over rigid exam-centric structures. In a March 6, 2025, parliamentary speech during the Ministry of Education's Committee of Supply debate, she proposed piloting a 10-year through-train programme from primary to , rendering the (PSLE) optional for participants. She argued that the PSLE exacerbates stress, straining family dynamics and contributing to Singapore's low fertility rate, as evidenced by correlations in high-pressure systems like those in and . Poa emphasized replacing PSLE with ongoing school-based assessments to stream students into appropriate learning environments, fostering 21st-century skills such as and rather than rote competition. She also called for reducing average class sizes—currently 33.6 in primary schools and 32.6 in secondary, exceeding the average of 21—to enable personalized instruction and accommodate diverse abilities, including through expanded Subject-Based Banding. These measures, she contended, would diminish reliance on tuition and promote holistic development without increasing teacher workload, leveraging declining enrollment trends. Her proposals extend to greater diversity in schooling options, including piloting small-scale schools in repurposed facilities to serve neurotypical and neurodivergent students alike, contrasting the uniformity of large public institutions. Poa supported optional Student-Initiated Learning (SIL) to encourage self-directed pursuits, suggesting student-voted structures and Edusave funding for customized skills via courses, rather than mandating participation. In a 2020 parliamentary response, she critiqued the grade-focused system for inadequately preparing for job market demands, where locals increasingly lose opportunities to foreigners. These reforms align with Poa's broader emphasis on individual freedoms by expanding parental and student choice, mitigating state-imposed uniformity that she links to mental health burdens and curtailed autonomy. Her co-founding of SmartLab Education Private School, which provides preparatory courses for GCE O- and A-Level exams, reflects practical commitment to alternative pathways outside mainstream compulsion. This approach counters the constraints of compulsory education under Singapore's system, advocating learner-centric models that respect varied developmental paces and family preferences.

Economic and Housing Policies

Hazel Poa has criticized measures for relying on temporary aids such as one-off vouchers and credits, arguing they foster dependency and lack due to dependence on fiscal surpluses and discretionary decisions. In her February 26, 2025, parliamentary response to Budget 2025, she stated that such "ad hoc benefits" fail to address root causes of rising living costs, proposing instead structural changes like reducing the goods and services tax (GST) to 7 percent and implementing fairer corporate taxation targeting high-profit entities. She has also advocated for policies enhancing work-life balance, including increasing public holidays from 11 to 14 and enacting a law to curb after-hours work demands. On broader economic management, Poa supports maintaining Singapore's while prioritizing local workers through tighter foreign manpower controls, such as capping foreigners at one-third of the workforce and enforcing fair hiring via audits and licensing for human resource managers. In a September 14, 2021, parliamentary speech, she highlighted the disproportionate 377 percent rise in Indian Employment Pass holders from 2005 to 2020—far exceeding global trends—and critiqued the Singapore-India Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA) for facilitating unrestricted entry in 127 professions, which she argued undermines wage growth for citizens. To align business incentives with social objectives, she proposed in the March 7, 2025, Committee of Supply debate reallocating existing foreign manpower quotas to reward employers offering extended (e.g., beyond 30 weeks) or hiring marginalized groups like seniors and persons with disabilities, without requiring additional government expenditure. Poa's housing advocacy centers on reforming to achieve both affordability and accessibility, contending that the current (HDB) system burdens buyers with high upfront costs that deplete (CPF) savings—often 64 to 100 percent—for retirement while subsidies from taxes fuel resale price spirals. The Progress Singapore Party's Affordable Home Scheme, which she has championed, would price new at costs only (about 40 percent of total value), deferring land costs (60 percent) to resale, thereby reducing initial loans and preserving equity without eroding existing flat values or reserves. She has urged ramping up supply to match projected annual marriages of 24,000 to 26,000, criticizing long build-to-order waits that delay family formation. To support singles and fertility rates, Poa proposed in February 2023 allowing them to buy three-room or smaller HDB and lowering the eligibility age to 28, linking housing barriers directly to Singapore's low .

Electoral and Governance Reforms

Hazel Poa has advocated for the abolition of Singapore's (GRC) system, arguing that it entrenches the ruling People's Action Party's dominance and lowers the overall quality of parliamentary representation. In a parliamentary motion moved by the (PSP) on July 5, 2023, Poa delivered the opening speech, contending that the GRCs, introduced in to ensure minority representation, have evolved into a mechanism that allows anchor ministers to "piggyback" less qualified candidates into , thereby diluting merit-based selection and hindering opposition growth. She proposed alternatives such as reserved electoral rolls for minorities and penalties for race-based voting to maintain without multi-member wards. The motion was rejected by the following day, with government members defending GRCs as essential for ethnic integration. Poa has criticized the GRC framework for impeding the development of a balanced political landscape, stating in 2023 that it disadvantages opposition parties by requiring them to field larger, costlier teams against government heavyweights. In her closing speech on the motion, she rebutted government claims that abolition would undermine minority representation, emphasizing data showing persistent ethnic diversity in single-member constituencies (SMCs) historically. To demonstrate commitment to smaller contests, Poa expressed openness in March 2025 to running in an SMC rather than a GRC, aiming to "walk her talk" on reducing barriers to individual candidacy. On electoral boundaries, Poa has called for reforms to enhance transparency and in the review process, filing a motion in July 2024 with fellow NCMP to overhaul the Electoral Boundaries Review Committee (EBRC). During the August 7, 2024, debate, she proposed measures including public consultations, fixed review timelines decoupled from elections, and independent oversight, such as a judge chairing the EBRC, to mitigate perceptions of partisan adjustments. The government rejected these suggestions, asserting the EBRC operates without political interference based on population changes and urban development. Poa has echoed opposition concerns over , particularly following the March 2025 EBRC report ahead of the general election, where boundary shifts fragmented opposition strongholds like West Coast GRC. In a March 2025 interview, she discussed how opaque revisions undermine electoral fairness, urging greater scrutiny to protect vote integrity, including more citizen involvement as counting agents. While not advocating wholesale governance restructuring like , her reforms target electoral mechanics to foster genuine competition and accountability in Singapore's Westminster-style system.

Controversies and Criticisms

Fact-Checking Incidents and Responses

In February 2024, a Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (POFMA) correction direction was issued to Progress Singapore Party (PSP) Non-Constituency Member of Parliament Leong Mun Wai for a statement made in Parliament on 5 February 2024, where he claimed the government had "decided to waive" the foreign worker levy for approximately 200,000 workers affected by retrenchments; the government clarified that the measure was a temporary deferment, not a waiver, for eligible employers. Although the statement was Leong's, Poa, as a fellow PSP NCMP and party vice-chairperson, was involved in the broader parliamentary context of the debate on Budget 2024 measures for retrenched workers. Leong subsequently stepped down as PSP secretary-general on 23 February 2024 to "take responsibility" for the incident, with Poa assuming the role amid the party's emphasis on accountability without a formal vote of no confidence against him. Poa has not been personally subject to POFMA directions or parliamentary corrections for factual inaccuracies in her statements. Instead, she has frequently questioned the accuracy or completeness of government disclosures. During the second reading of the Insurance (Amendment) Bill on 16 October 2024, Poa argued that claims about Insurance's capital needs justifying its sale to an international were misleading, as the insurer's remained above regulatory requirements post-COVID-19; Minister for Law countered that there was no intent to mislead and that solvency assessments accounted for future risks. In the context of the 2025 general election, Poa challenged National Development Minister Desmond Lee's assertions on HDB flat affordability at a PSP rally on 1 May 2025, describing them as misleading given rising median household incomes outpacing flat prices while ignoring qualification barriers and resale restrictions that limit options for lower-income buyers. Poa has also critiqued the application of POFMA more broadly, raising parliamentary questions in 2023 about criteria for issuing correction directions, particularly in cases labeled as "political sophistry," and expressing concerns over its potential to stifle legitimate debate.

Debates on Meritocracy and Systemic Issues

Hazel Poa has critiqued Singapore's (GRC) system as incompatible with , asserting that it permits candidates lacking individual electoral viability to enter by leveraging stronger teammates, thereby lowering overall legislative quality. In parliamentary discussions on electoral boundaries, she emphasized that upholding requires impartial processes free from political interference, including transparent boundary reviews to ensure genuine . These positions contrast with government defenses of GRCs for promoting minority representation, which Poa argues prioritizes ethnic quotas over voter-driven selection of capable representatives. Poa has engaged in debates on systemic economic pressures exacerbating inequality and constraining , particularly through over-reliance on that suppresses local wages and strains family formation. During the March 2025 Committee of Supply debate for the Ministry of Manpower, she proposed tying quotas to employer adoption of family-supportive policies, such as flexible hours, to align incentives with broader social objectives like rates and work-life balance, which she views as undermined by current systemic priorities favoring growth over equity. In May 2021 parliamentary contributions, she advocated reining in property market speculation to alleviate , linking unchecked price surges to reduced intergenerational mobility for middle- and lower-income households. Her observations on labor economics, including negative correlations between rapid workforce expansion and wage growth for , have fueled discussions on whether merit-based systems inadvertently perpetuate dependency on state subsidies. In February 2024 Budget debates, Poa highlighted data showing a majority of households depending on grants for daily costs as evidence of an "unhealthy situation," attributing it to failures in fostering self-sustaining prosperity rather than temporary relief. Critics from benches have countered that such critiques undervalue global competitive pressures and existing progressive measures, yet Poa insists on evidence-based reforms to restore causal links between effort, opportunity, and outcomes. These exchanges underscore broader tensions in Singapore's meritocratic framework, where empirical indicators of stagnant mobility challenge official narratives of equitable advancement.

Personal Life

Family Dynamics and Political Partnerships

Hazel Poa is married to , whom she met while both were students at the ; the couple later co-founded an education-related business. After more than a decade of marriage and unsuccessful attempts at artificial reproductive assistance, Poa and Tan adopted two sons in her mid-30s, a decision she has described as transformative and one of her best. The sons, aged 14 and 15 as of 2021, have integrated into the family, with Poa's initially reluctant mother eventually viewing them no differently from biological grandchildren. Poa has emphasized the demands of motherhood alongside her career, noting it exceeded her expectations but fostered personal growth; the couple's parental responsibilities influenced their entry into , motivating efforts to improve Singapore's systems for future generations. Tan provided key support during Poa's political forays, focusing on business stability to enable her PSP involvement from 2019 onward, while crediting shared values in public service as central to their partnership. In political terms, Poa and Tan formed a rare husband-wife opposition duo, with Tan contesting earlier under the Reform Party before both joining the National Solidarity Party (NSP) for the 2011 in Chua Chu Kang GRC. Their collaboration extended to the (PSP) after 2019, including joint ground activities; in the 2025 , Poa stood in West Coast-Jurong West GRC while Tan contested Kebun Baru SMC, aligning on goals like empowering individuals and leaving no one behind. Poa also partnered closely with PSP colleague Leong Mun Wai as Non-Constituency Members of Parliament from 2020 to 2025, collaborating on parliamentary scrutiny and jointly donating their allowances to charity, which amplified opposition voices despite their unelected status. This tandem, including invitations to debates and tireless advocacy, demonstrated PSP's strategy of leveraging experienced pairs to challenge incumbents.

Public Persona and Extrapolitical Engagements

Prior to her entry into partisan politics in 2009, Hazel Poa served in Singapore's civil service, leveraging her academic background in mathematics. She was awarded the Public Service Commission Overseas Merit Scholarship in 1989 and graduated from the University of Cambridge with a first-class honours degree in mathematics around 1993. During her civil service tenure, Poa held positions in the Administrative Service, the Ministry of Finance, and the Prime Minister's Office, contributing to public administration and policy formulation. Poa's public persona is characterized by an analytical and evidence-based communication style, reflective of her quantitative expertise, often employing data and in public discourse. Media profiles highlight her as a former government scholar who transitioned to opposition advocacy, emphasizing principled stances over conformity. Contemporaries have noted her forceful demeanor, advising her to balance assertiveness with perceptions of gentleness to navigate gendered expectations in professional settings. Beyond core political activities, Poa has engaged in discussions on and societal issues, such as events hosted by the Institute of Policy Studies, where she exchanged views on Singapore's political landscape. Her pre-political professional experience underscores a commitment to and , informing her broader public engagements outside electoral campaigns.

References

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