THIS IS NOT A GAME OF CARDS. THIS IS YOUR LIFE AND MINE 
- LKY (1980)
   

 
    
Have you heard this argument before? They tell you the country will not
 collapse if you vote in a mediocre government because we have a great 
civil service. The civil servants will run the country.
 With all the established institutions that we have, the country will 
continue to function smoothly and efficiently and we will continue to 
prosper, they say.
 
 Essentially what they are doing is to shift 
your confidence to institutions in an attempt to assure you that it does
 not matter who forms the government because we have great institutions.
 
 Which leads to the question: Then why bother to elect a government, and
 a mediocre one at that? Why not dispense with government and let the 
civil service run the country?
 
 But we know better. Institutions are great because of their leaders.
 
 Mr Lee Kuan Yew was a lifelong champion of the rule of law. When he 
became Prime Minister in 1959, the first thing he set out to do was to 
eradicate corruption in public institutions.
 
 Thus over the 
years, the institutions have gone from strength to strength because of 
strong leadership and an anti-corruption stance.
 
 Indeed, 
leaders are the ones who set the tone and directions for institutions. 
They are the policy makers. They make key decisions and they are the 
ones called upon to respond to crises.
 
 Leaders matter and it 
matters who we choose to be leaders in government because they either 
make or break an institution and a country. 
  
Look at Greece and see what bad governance can do to a once prosperous country.
George
 Papandreou, Prime Minister of Greece from 2009 to 2011 said during his 
term as PM that 'poor governance' was the root cause of Greece's 
problems and debt was just a symptom. 
  
 Look at AHPETC and
 see what one term of poor management has done to its finances, how very quickly it went from surplus to deficit. 
Election
 is coming and still their accounts remain in a mess. Can you entrust 
your future to them?