AI Influence Profile
Patrick Tay Teck Guan
Profile pending. This page currently summarises parliamentary appearances and policy links from existing records.
Parliamentary speeches (23)
MOH Committee of Supply 2026 — AI as National Healthcare Mission
2026-03-04 · Parliament 15
During the MOH Committee of Supply debate, MP Mariam Jaafar delivered a landmark speech on AI in healthcare policy. She put a bigger question to the Minister: if healthcare is truly a national AI mission, the goal cannot just be incremental adoption — Singapore must build a complete system (infrastructure, governance, talent, and the underlying plumbing) so that AI safely, effectively and at scale improves outcomes for every patient. She identified the need to cultivate "translator" talent fluent in both clinical realities and machine learning. Once AI is shown to deliver real patient benefit safely and reliably at scale, Singapore will gain a decisive global competitive advantage.
Publication of Quarterly Statistics on AI-related Retrenchment and Redeployment of Affected Workers
2026-01-12 · Parliament 15
An MP asked whether quarterly statistics on AI-related retrenchments and the redeployment of affected workers will be published. The government replied that retrenchments are mainly attributed to business restructuring (which includes AI-driven productivity gains) and that it will continue to study technology's impact on jobs. The central debate is the transparency of AI retrenchment data and how its specific impact is assessed.
Use of Copyright Law to Strengthen Protection Against Deepfakes
2025-09-24 · Parliament 15
An MP asked whether Singapore is studying Denmark's use of copyright law to fight deepfakes. The government said it takes the online harms of deepfakes seriously and will introduce new legislation to strengthen victims' redress. It stressed that copyright law primarily supports innovation and creativity, is not the right tool to regulate technology abuse, and related infringements can be handled via other IP laws. The core debate: whether copyright law is appropriate for deepfake governance.
Reasons for Lower Proportion of Fresh Graduates in Full-time Employment and Extent of Help from GRaduate Industry Traineeship Programme
2025-09-23 · Parliament 15
MPs asked about the cyclical and structural drivers behind the lower share of fresh graduates landing full-time employment, and how the Graduate Industry Traineeships (GRIT) programme can ease the difficulty. The debate focused on GRIT's implementation details, quality safeguards, long-term returns, and support for strategic industries. The government emphasised structured training and firm participation to lift graduate competitiveness; MPs focused on programme effectiveness and fair conversion mechanisms. The core debate: whether the programme genuinely improves long-term employment quality.
Committee of Supply – Head S (Ministry of Manpower)
2025-03-06 · Parliament 14
MPs questioned the effectiveness of MOM's retirement security, workforce-upgrading and inclusive workplace efforts, with a focus on the challenges of an ageing workforce. They proposed using assistive technologies to redesign jobs and setting up dedicated training centres to lift senior employment rates. The government has yet to respond fully; the debate centres on tackling ageing-workforce shortages and the economic impact.
Committee of Supply – Head R (Ministry of Law)
2025-03-04 · Parliament 14
MPs asked how Singapore can maintain its competitive edge as an international dispute resolution hub, especially against rising competitors like Abu Dhabi. The government stressed that Singapore's rule of law, professional talent and innovation continue to attract cross-border dispute cases, and pushes international mediation conventions. The core debate: how to handle global competition and attract talent so Singapore's lead is not eroded.
Committee of Supply – Head P (Ministry of Home Affairs)
2025-03-04 · Parliament 14
MPs raised the MHA budget and measures against tech-enabled crime. The government replied that a new clearance concept lifts border security and efficiency, using AI to strengthen risk assessment and automation while cutting manpower needs. The debate focused on AI-enabled crime challenges and HR pressure; the government emphasised transformation and reskilling, reflecting growing focus on integrating security and technology.
Committee of Supply – Head P (Ministry of Home Affairs)
2025-03-03 · Parliament 14
MPs asked how the government partners community groups and the public to safeguard Singapore's racial and religious harmony and respond to the global trust deficit in public institutions. They highlighted the threat of rumours and misinformation to social cohesion and called for collective effort. The government response is not included in the excerpt; the core debate is on balancing policy enforcement with community participation to strengthen public trust in law-enforcement institutions.
Committee of Supply – Head J (Ministry of Defence)
2025-03-03 · Parliament 14
MPs asked about the changing international security environment and its impact on Singapore's defence budget, focusing on US-China tensions, the wavering rules-based order, and regional security risks. The government stressed the importance of defence and the SAF for national security and called for sustained, strong defensive capability to handle complex and shifting global conditions. The core debate: the stability of international alliances and how Singapore should adjust its defence strategy.
Debate on Annual Budget Statement
2025-02-27 · Parliament 14
The parliamentary debate centred on Budget 2025, focusing on how to navigate global political-economic shifts and technological change — especially the impact of frontier technologies such as AI on the economy and society. The government emphasised supporting families and firms while actively positioning for future growth via tech innovation and talent development. The core debate: how to balance short-term support with long-term transformation, and the employment and governance challenges raised by AI.
Guidelines for Employers' Use of Automated Decision-making Tools for Hiring or Promotions to Prevent Biases
2024-11-13 · Parliament 14
An MP asked whether the government will introduce guidelines on employers' use of automated decision-making tools to prevent hiring and promotion bias, recommending bias audits and disclosure. The Manpower Minister replied that the existing Tripartite Guidelines on Fair Employment Practices already cover fair-employment principles, no related complaints have been received, AI is evolving fast, and the government will keep monitoring and work with relevant bodies to assess the applicability of current rules. MPs followed up on data privacy and employee consent; the government said it will consider improvements but cautioned against over-restriction.
Committee of Supply – Head K (Ministry of Education)
2024-03-01 · Parliament 14
MPs stressed that education must adapt to rapid technological change, especially the challenges from generative AI, calling for expanded upskilling courses and support for students' diverse development. The government acknowledged the system's resilience and international performance and committed to building students' adaptability and creativity. The core debate: balancing traditional teaching with cultivation of emerging skills, and broadening the scope of funding use.
Committee of Supply – Head J (Ministry of Defence)
2024-02-28 · Parliament 14
MPs asked MINDEF about its tracking of global and regional security trends, focusing on the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war and Middle East conflict on Singapore's security. The government emphasised the volatility of the international order and the challenges from cyber and information warfare, indicating it will keep watching and adjusting defence strategy to handle a complex, shifting security environment. The core debate: balancing budget allocation with response to emerging security threats.
Debate on Annual Budget Statement
2024-02-27 · Parliament 14
The debate focused on the path to economic growth in Singapore's Budget 2024, against a backdrop of global slowdown, high inflation and rising geopolitical uncertainty. The government emphasised structural reform and support for firms and households to navigate challenges, driving long-term sustainability. References to tech innovation, automation, and AI's impact on jobs and industry competitiveness reflected concern over AI governance and industrial development. The core debate: how to balance growth with social protection and respond to rising global protectionism.
Committee of Supply – Head S (Ministry of Manpower)
2023-03-01 · Parliament 14
MPs raised the impact of an ageing workforce and demographic shifts on Singapore's economy, noting that some sectors have a high share of older workers and may face rapid future labour outflow. They emphasised challenges from tech change and shifting work attitudes, urging attention to flexible work arrangements. The government did not respond directly. The core debate: how to manage employment-structure adjustment from ageing and technological change.
Committee of Supply – Head K (Ministry of Education)
2023-02-28 · Parliament 14
MPs raised the education budget and career-guidance support, emphasising educators' contributions during the pandemic and the importance of future skills development. They proposed stronger career counselling for youth and working adults and broader use of SkillsFuture Credit for lifelong learning. The government has not yet responded in this excerpt. The core debate: how to better support youth career development and skills matching.
Committee of Supply – Head J (Ministry of Defence)
2022-03-02 · Parliament 14
MPs raised the defence budget, stressing that the Russia-Ukraine war underlines the importance of small-state self-defence and the threat of information warfare. The debate focused on geopolitical tension, tech competition, and the security impact of cyber and information warfare. The government emphasised strengthening self-defence and tech defence capabilities. The core debate: balancing the budget with response to emerging security threats.
Committee of Supply – Head Q (Ministry of Communications and Information)
2020-03-03 · Parliament 13
MPs raised data-sharing, privacy protection, design-thinking innovation, and AI ethics frameworks in the digital transformation, focusing on Singapore's challenges with limited data scale and SME digitalisation capability. The government addressed digital trade agreements, data privacy principles, and innovation-driving measures, emphasising the development of an AI ethics framework. The core debate: balancing data sharing with privacy protection and lifting local-firm digital capability.
Hiring, Developing and Strengthening Singaporean Core
2019-09-02 · Parliament 13
MPs questioned whether the Tech@SG programme — which helps tech firms hire foreign talent — should continue under current economic conditions. The government stressed global competition for scarce tech talent and the need to accelerate local tech talent development while expanding the talent pool through training and education to keep Singapore competitive globally. The core debate: balancing the inflow of foreign talent with prioritising local talent development.
Committee of Supply − Head U (Prime Minister's Office)
2019-02-28 · Parliament 13
Questions focused on how the Public Service can use AI and data analytics to lift efficiency, integrate services, and meet citizen needs. MPs emphasised that technology should be citizen-centred and avoid mechanical enforcement, with the government pushing high-tech, high-touch, and high-adaptability transformation in the public sector to lift productivity and service quality.
Introduction of Regulations with Advent of Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Machines
2018-02-06 · Parliament 13
MPs asked whether new legislation will be promulgated or existing laws reviewed to cover ethics, morality, kill switches, and liability with the rise of AI and autonomous machines. The government emphasised a domain-specific regulatory approach, citing safety testing and insurance requirements for autonomous vehicles in transport, and algorithmic oversight in finance. It also noted plans to lift relevant technical capability to drive Smart Nation. The core debate: how to balance tech development with risk management for public interest and safety.
Quality of Upcoming New Jobs in Tech and IT Sector
2016-03-24 · Parliament 13
An MP asked about the type, distribution, hierarchy levels, and skills requirements of the 15,000 new tech and IT jobs announced. The government replied that the roles span multiple industries — mainly professional and technical positions — with diverse skill needs including programming, cybersecurity, and data analytics. The government emphasised continued tech-job demand growth, aligned with the Smart Nation strategy. The core debate: job quality and skills matching; the government committed to follow-up manpower development plans.
Committee of Supply – Head K (Ministry of Education)
2015-03-06 · Parliament 12
MPs raised the question of graduate employment matching for Singapore universities, citing high graduate unemployment in South Korea and China and worrying about youth unemployment risk in Singapore. They emphasised education should focus on practical skills and called for SkillsFuture to drive lifelong learning and lift employability. The government's response focused on investing in citizen skills to prepare for future employment. The core debate: education-labour market match and prevention of youth unemployment.