November 5, 2025 – Singapore Headlines

1Singapore Parliament passes online harms Bill after more than eight hours of debate

Story gist: Singapore’s Parliament passed the Online Harms Bill after more than eight hours of debate.
Left
No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Singapore Parliament passes online harms Bill after more than eight hours of debate
— The Straits Times
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Right
Trailblazers for online safety: PAP MPs are leading the way to make the internet a safer space for all
— petir.sg
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Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets provide no coverage, leaving critical perspectives on potential censorship or free speech concerns absent. Center outlets, like The Straits Times, frame the story neutrally, focusing on the factual passage of the bill and debate duration without emphasis. Right-leaning sources, such as petir.sg, adopt a positive tone, praising PAP MPs as trailblazers for enhancing online safety and portraying the bill as a proactive measure for public good.

2Singapore Cuts Tax Breaks for Prince Group-Linked Family Offices

Story gist: Singapore revoked tax incentives for family offices linked to Cambodia’s Prince Group. The move follows allegations against the group’s founder for involvement in scams spanning Cambodia to London.
Left
No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
How an Accused Scam Kingpin Built an Empire From Cambodia to London
— Bloomberg
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets provide no coverage, omitting progressive perspectives on international finance or corporate accountability. Center outlets like Bloomberg frame the story investigatively, emphasizing the accused founder’s empire-building and global scam allegations with a neutral, detailed tone focused on financial networks. Right-leaning outlets are absent, leaving out conservative views on regulation or business freedoms.

3Megan Khung fatal abuse case: MSF to set up social services coordination centre, strengthen oversight

Story gist: In the fatal abuse case of eight-year-old Megan Khung in Singapore, the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) announced plans to establish a social services coordination centre and strengthen oversight of social services.
Left
No major left-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Center
Megan Khung fatal abuse case: MSF to set up social services coordination centre, strengthen oversight
— CNA
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Center-leaning outlet CNA reports factually on MSF’s response to the Megan Khung case, emphasizing governmental actions for coordination and oversight without added commentary. Left- and right-leaning outlets provide no coverage, leaving absent progressive critiques on systemic failures or conservative views on accountability and policy effectiveness.

4Zohran Mamdani elected New York City mayor, capping stunning rise

Story gist: Zohran Mamdani won the 2025 New York City mayoral election. He will serve as the city’s next mayor.
Left
New York City Mayoral Election Live Results 2025: Mamdani Wins
— The New York Times
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Center
In Mamdani’s New York win, India’s Nehru finds an echo
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The New York Times frame the story with straightforward live results reporting, emphasizing the factual win without added context. Center outlets like BBC add historical depth by comparing Mamdani’s victory to India’s Nehru, highlighting ideological echoes. Right-leaning coverage is absent, suggesting potential omission of conservative perspectives on the election outcome or candidate background.

5Landmark workplace fairness law passed, to take effect in 2027

Story gist: Parliament passed the Workplace Fairness (Dispute Resolution) Bill. The law will take effect in 2027.
Left
Workplace Fairness (Dispute Resolution) Bill passes in Parliament; NTUC Labour MPs call for fairer, safer workplaces for all
— NTUC UPortal
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Center
Landmark workplace fairness law passed, to take effect in 2027
— CNA
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like NTUC UPortal emphasize the bill’s passage with a positive tone, highlighting NTUC Labour MPs’ calls for fairer and safer workplaces to underscore labor protections. Center outlets like CNA provide neutral, factual reporting using ‘landmark’ to denote significance without added advocacy. Right-leaning coverage is absent, omitting potential conservative perspectives on business burdens or regulatory overreach.