Vivian Balakrishnan's Facebook blooper also bloop-bloop in 2015
Is the Facebook glitch in the System or the Man?

Back in 2015, during the General Election’s Cooling-Off Day — a sacred 24-hour no-campaigning zone— Vivian Balakrishnan’s Facebook page was caught posting.
The Elections Department (ELD) issued a stern reminder about the rules, and Vivian’s team chalked it up to a “technical bug” causing “recurrent auto-posting,” later confirmed by Facebook (Straits Times, 2015).
Most gave Vivian the benefit of the doubt but fast-forward a decade, and that “one-off” glitch is starting to look like a feature, not a bug.
Another "bug" bites
On March 13, 2025, Vivian’s official Facebook page “liked” a post by Calvin Cheng suggesting pro-Palestinian activists be shipped to Gaza with no return ticket — a diplomatic disaster in a single click.
The backlash was instant, with netizens and activist groups like Monday of Palestine Solidarity slamming it as tone-deaf, especially given Vivian’s parliamentary nods to Palestinian causes.
By April 2, Vivian denied liking the post, claiming “unauthorized activity” and reporting it to Meta for investigation.
One too many glitches
Vivian’s social media has gone off-script, and the “bug” excuse is wearing thin.
In 2015, we could shrug it off—social media was still a wild frontier, and bugs weren’t uncommon.
But in 2025, when Singaporeans are dodging phishing scams and securing their Singpass with 2FA, a minister’s verified account getting “hacked” or “bugged” raises red flags.
When a minister’s account keeps glitching, it erodes confidence.
If Vivian’s team can’t secure a Facebook page, how do we trust them with cybersecurity or foreign policy?
With GE2025 looming, Singaporeans want leaders who can keep up — on policy and on Facebook.
Anything less, and Vivian risks being debugged by the ballot box.