Singapore's political landscape has long been characterized by a hegemonic ruling party, the People's Action Party, which has maintained dominance through institutional control and carefully managed electoral openings. Opposition actors have periodically gained public attention, yet remain fragmented and fail to form stable alliances even when collective strength could improve their electoral prospects. The Workers Party (WP), as the most electorally salient opposition force, occupies a central paradox: it attracts voter support while simultaneously resisting cooperative coalition-building. This persistent disunity among opposition parties raises the question of what internal strategic logic reinforces fragmentation despite the apparent external incentive to unite. This paper examines the subtle fragmentation among Singapores opposition parties, especially focusing on the WP and its refusal to join an opposition coalition. Based on political branding theory and papers on authoritarian elections, this paper argues that the WP, through strategic brand differentiation, limits its willingness to cooperate with other opposition parties. By situating this issue in the context of the hegemonic party system as well as political branding theory, this paper presents a novel synthesis of theories on how political branding can serve both as a cognitive shortcut and a constraint on opposition coalition construction.
Zunguo Du (Tue,) studied this question.