“ANSWERING THE CALL”
Mr Tan, who announced a week ago that he had submitted his application for a certificate of eligibility, also said on Saturday that he was running for the presidency as a way of “answering the call of the people”.
In a separate blog post, he said his friends had urged him to run because they said there was a risk that the election would be a walkover or a “contest between two pro-establishment candidates”.
Mr Tan reiterated that he does not intend to be an “adversary to the elected government”.
“I believe that, on the whole, our ministers do work hard, are competent and they too share the same goals that I have outlined. However, it is evident that some of their approaches and policies are not producing the desired outcome,” he said.
“I want to offer an independent perspective, to guide and support the ministers in finding alternative solutions to the issues at hand.”
Mr Tan is the fourth person to have indicated their intention to run in the upcoming Presidential Election. The others are former Senior Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, businessman George Goh and former GIC chief investment officer Ng Kok Song.
A date for the election has not been announced. President Halimah Yacob’s term ends on Sep 13.
WHO IS TAN KIN LIAN?
Mr Tan became chief executive officer of NTUC Income in 1977, holding the position for 30 years until he left in 2007.
After he left NTUC Income, he started a business in computer software and has also travelled regularly to provide insurance consultancy in Indonesia.
He was a member of the PAP from the 1970s to 2008. In 1979, he became chairman of the Marine Parade Community Centre.
Mr Tan contested the 2011 Presidential Election but came in last of the four candidates, securing 4.91 per cent of the more than 2.27 million votes.
He lost his deposit of S$48,000 (US$35,700) for failing to garner more than one-eighth of the total number of votes polled in the election.