14th Parliament of Singapore
| 14th Parliament of Singapore | |||||||
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| Majority parliament | |||||||
| 24 August 2020 – 15 April 2025 (4 years, 7 months and 22 days) | |||||||
| House | |||||||
Seating arrangements of the House | |||||||
| Speaker of Parliament |
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| Prime Minister |
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| Leader of the Opposition |
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| Session(s) | |||||||
| 1st Session | |||||||
| 24 August 2020 – 24 March 2023 (2 years and 7 months) | |||||||
| 2nd Session | |||||||
| 10 April 2023 – 15 April 2025 (2 years and 5 days) | |||||||
| Cabinet(s) | |||||||
| 14th Cabinet | |||||||
| Lee Hsien Loong 27 July 2020 – 15 May 2024 | |||||||
| 15th Cabinet | |||||||
| Lawrence Wong 15 May 2024 – 15 April 2025 | |||||||
| Parliamentarians | |||||||
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The 14th Parliament of Singapore was a meeting of the Parliament of Singapore. It opened on 24 August 2020 and dissolved on 15 April 2025. The membership was set by the 2020 Singapore General Election on 10 July 2020. The final sitting for the term was on 8 April 2025, to discuss on the consensus relating the tariffs imposed by President of the United States Donald Trump a week prior.
The 14th Parliament was controlled by the People's Action Party majority, led by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and members of the cabinet, which assumed power on 25 July 2020; it was then later led by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong and its inaugural cabinet, who assumed power on 15 May 2024. The initial number of seats of parliament at the start of the term was 104, with 10 seats from the Workers' Party led by Pritam Singh, two Non-Constituency Member of Parliament seats from the Progress Singapore Party, and nine Nominated Members. This is also the first time where the position for the Leader of the Opposition was officialised.
Not counting Nominated members, The parliament had the most seats vacated in post-independence since the inaugural Parliament during the term, with six, including Speaker of Parliament Tan Chuan-Jin who vacated his seat citing extramaritial affair along with Cheng Li Hui, Senior Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam who later contested the 2023 Singaporean presidential election and Transport Minister S. Iswaran, who became the first cabinet minister since Teh Cheang Wan in 1986 to be charged for corruption. At four years, seven months and 22 days, the 14th Parliament had the second longest term in Singapore history, only behind the 8th Parliament; it also had the most sittings in one term, at 162, surpassing the previous term's 135.