Lam Pin Min


Dr Lam Pin Min is a former politician and medical doctor from Singapore. A member of the country's governing People's Action Party, he was the Senior Minister of State in the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Transport.He is a Chinese Singaporean of Hakka descent from the Lam clan, and has family roots in Dabu County, Guangdong, China. He lost his Member of Parliament seat in 2020 Singapore General Election.

Early life

Lam has four siblings - two brothers and a younger sister. As the middle child, he is quoted to have had to "recycle the secondhand textbooks handed down from elder brother." He grew up in one of the earliest HDB flats in Tanglin Halt Road. It was a 3-room HDB flat – 2 bedrooms and 1 living room, with only one bedroom being air-conditioned. The house was cramped and the siblings had to sleep on mattresses on the floor. Lam's father was the sole breadwinner as his mother stayed home to look after the four children. All three of his siblings, and him, have graduated from university, supported by their parents. Lam claims he grew up wanting to be a veterinarian, but his parents thought that studying to become a doctor locally would be much cheaper.

Career

Lam served as a regular medical officer in the Singapore Armed Forces in 1995, obtaining a Diploma in Aviation Medicine from the United Kingdom in 1997 and subsequently a Fellowship in the Royal College of Surgeons and a Master in Medicine in Ophthalmology from the National University of Singapore in 2000. Dr Lam held many appointments in the Republic of Singapore Air Force, including Officer Commanding in an Airbase Medical Centre and as a Branch Head in the RSAF Aeromedical Centre. He also spent 3 months serving as the medical commander of the Singapore Medical Contingent, serving in the United Nations Military Hospital in East Timor during pre-independence in 2000. Lam was trained as an Aviation Medicine Specialist and served the RSAF as a medical officer and Flight Surgeon from 1995 to 2003, before moving into clinical practice in 2003. Prior to becoming a Minister of State, he served as a pediatric ophthalmologist at KK Women's and Children's Hospital,the Singapore National Eye Centre, and Eagle Eye Centre. Lam sits on the Civil Aviation Medical Board and is the Adviser to the Society of Aviation Medicine, Singapore.

Political career

Lam was first elected to parliament at the 2006 general election as a member of the PAP team in the Ang Mo Kio Group Representation Constituency. He was part of the six-member PAP team which defeated the team from the Workers' Party by 96,636 votes to 49,479.
At the 2011 general election, Lam's Sengkang West ward was made a single-member constituency. Lam stood in the single-member constituency and defeated Koh Choong Yong of the Workers' Party by 14,689 votes to 10,591.
At the 2015 general election, Lam defeated Koh Choong Yong of the Worker's Party in Sengkang West SMC after scoring 62.1% of the vote.
Lam served as the Chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee for Health from 2009 to 2014.
In August 2014, Lam was appointed a Minister of State in the Ministry of Health.
Subsequently in May 2017, Dr Lam was appointed Senior Minister of State in the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Transport.
During the 2020 general election, Lam contested in the newly carved Sengkang Group Representation Constituency made up by Sengkang West SMC, Punggol East SMC and parts of the Pasir Ris–Punggol GRC. Lam stood in the Group representation constituency and was defeated by the Workers' Party team which had won the election with 60,136 votes to 55,214 votes, resulting in an electoral defeat. This is the second instance of the ruling PAP losing a Group Representation Constituency to the Opposition since their loss in 2011 to the Worker's Party in Aljunied Group Representation Constituency.

Controversies

In January 2015, Lam was involved in a controversy wherein Build-To-Order residents in Fernvale Lea, in his Sengkang West ward, were not informed of plans to build a columbarium next to their block. During a meeting with residents, Dr Lam was spotted sitting alongside the contractors, leading to a misunderstanding that he was on their side instead of the residents’. Minister for National Development Khaw Boon Wan informed Parliament that there will be no commercial columbarium at the site.
In February 2018 it was revealed that Lam had sent an appeal letter directly to State Courts to help his resident, Tang Ling Lee, who was sentenced to one week jail for seriously injuring a motorcyclist in a road traffic accident. The High Court Judge, justice See Kee Oon dismissed the appeal, stating that Lam's letter had misrepresented the facts and trivialised the injuries sustained by the rider. This incident led to a furor online with many netizens questioning why Lam, a legislative as well as an executive member of the government, was overstepping his duty by interfering with the judiciary. Such letters should be forwarded to the Attorney-General’s Chambers first.

Education

Lam was educated in Anglo-Chinese School and National Junior College . He graduated from the medical school of the National University of Singapore in 1993. He then joined the Singapore Armed Forces as a regular medical officer in 1995. Whilst in service in the Singapore Armed Forces, he obtained his postgraduate Diploma in Aviation Medicine from the Royal College of Physicians in 1997 and subsequently a Fellowship in the Royal College of Surgeons and a Master in Medicine in Ophthalmology from NUS in 2000.

Personal life

Lam is married and has two daughters. He is a Christian.