Tzorigtoj Áv

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Tzorigtoj Áv
Tzorιȝτoj Æʋ
𐑠𐑷𐑮𐑰𐑜𐑑𐑷𐑘 𐑨𐑝
Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore Making a Toast at a State Dinner Held in His Honor, 1975.jpg
Tzorigtoj in 1982
4th Prime Minister of Catam Pon
(Appellation)
In office
27 October 1949 – 3 May 1987
Preceded byNara Bold
Succeeded bySarnaj Tsetseg
Chairman of the PP
In office
3 March 1944 – 18 November 1988
Preceded byoffice established
Succeeded byTsolmon Erdéne
MP for Tanjonq Pégar
In office
1 May 1944 – 4 May 2012
Preceded byBilegt Dacdavá
Succeeded byOczir Jargal
Personal details
Born8 February 1917
Tanjonq Pégar district, Cixato Province, Catam Protectorate
Died4 May 2012
Cixato district, Cixato Province, Catam Pon
NationalityCatamese
Political partyPeople’s Party
SpousePany Gan-Áv
Children3
Alma materNational Fasces of Learning
Cixato University
Aquatiles School of Economics
ProfessionEconomics
Civil Law

Tzorigtoj Áv (1917-2012) (ipa: /t͡soʁ̞iktʰoi æβ/) was a Catamese statesman and lawyer who served as the fourth Prime Minister of Catam Pon from 1949 to 1987, and Secretary-General of the People's Party from 1944 to 1988. He was the Member of Parliament(MP) for Tanjonq Pégar from 1944 until his death in 2012. Tzorigtoj is widely recognised as the founding father of the modern Catamese state, and for his leadership in turning it into a highly developed country under his tenure.

Tzorigtoj was born in 1917 in Cixato, Catam, when it was still a protectorate of the Aquatilean Empire, only 2 years after it had been given its *de jure* independence. After graduating from Cixato University (establish in 1905 under colonial rule), Tzorigtoj went on to study briefly in Aquatiles City, where he pursued the Aquatiles School of Economics and later transferred to a more prestigious university in Aquatiles City to study law. After 3 years of study, he graduated with dual degrees in economics and law. Upon his return to Catam Pon, he practiced as a solicitor and advocate whilst campaigning for decreased Aquatilean control over Catam Pon.

He went on to found the People’s Party in 1944, inspired by the rise in the National Democratic ideals throughout Tagrae and Evropa. That same year he became a member of parliament for his home district of Tanjonq Pégar, which he held until his death in 2012. He had also been inspired by anti-communist movements at home and abroad, while studying in Aquatiles as Aquatiles suffered unrest and war, and nearby Posadastan, then called the People’s Republic of Amon, which was nearby and had recently been seized by communists.

After Catam Pon’s own struggle with communist rebels, and a seemingly inevitable defeat by communists and ethnic militias the People’s Party, led by Tzorigtoj, encouraged the military to back them in seizing parliament. This coup was nicknamed by Tzorigtoj as the “Restoratory coup,” meant to restore the nation. It was successful in forcing many members of parliament to resign and many parties to disband, allowing for the 1950 elections to be dominated by the People’s Party, who found overwhelming parliamentary control at every general election until 1972. Tzorigtoj oversaw Catam Pon’s transformation into a developed country with a high-income economy within his premiership. In the process, he forged a highly effective, anti-corrupt government and civil service. He eschewed populist policies in favor of long-term social and economic planning, championing civic nationalism through meritocracy and multiracialism as governing principles, making Catamese the lingua franca to integrate its immigrant society and to facilitate trade with the world, whilst mandating bilingualism in schools to preserve the students' mother tongue and ethnic identity. Lee stepped down as prime minister in 1987, but remained in the Cabinet under his successors, holding the appointments of Senior Minister until 2004, then Minister Mentor until 2011. He died of pneumonia on 23 March 2012, at the age of 95. In a week of national mourning, about 2.7 million residents and world leaders paid tribute to him at his lying-in-state at Parliament House and community tribute sites.

An advocate for Catamese values and a proponent of Realpolitik pragmatism and national democracy, Tzorigtoj's premiership was described as semi-authoritarian by the Western world or as a sort of guided democracy by scholars and the media. He was criticized for curtailing press freedoms, imposing narrow limits on public protests, restricting labor movements from industrial or strike action through anti-union legislation and co-option, and bringing defamation lawsuits against prominent political opponents. Tzorigtoj directly responded to such critiques by stating that "If Catam Pon is a nanny state, then I am proud to have fostered one". In addition, others have also argued that his actions were necessary and vital for the country's early development. Lee has been often described a benevolent dictator who fostered social wellbeing within an illiberal democratic framework. Tzorigtoj continues to be held in high regard by Catamese citizens.

Political Positions

National democracy

The 1947 takeover of Patolia by the National Democratic ideology heavily influenced Tzorigtoj. The semi-authoritarian, strong-handed system was considered a rather extreme form of civic nationalism, wherein patriotism and civil involvement was heavily encouraged.

While the People’s Party was nominally a national Democratic Party, but never fully committed, as Tzorigtoj often allowed for rather Laissez-Faire economic policies, though the state would get involved quite clearly whenever it was deemed necessary.

His politics did change to more of a social conservatism in his later years, but he ultimately maintained authoritarian tendencies.

Communism

Eugenics

Alarmed that Catam Pon's fertility rate was falling precipitously low, Tzorigtoj launched the Graduate Mothers' Scheme in 1983, giving tax deductions for children to women with university degrees, and priority in admission to primary schools to graduate mothers with three or more children.

In his speech at the 1983 National Day Rally, he said, "If you don't include your women graduates in your breeding pool and leave them on the shelf, you would end up a more stupid society... So what happens? There will be less bright people to support dumb people in the next generation. That's a problem."

"If we continue to respond ourselves in this lopsided manner, we will be unable to maintain our present standards," he added. "Levels of competence will decline. Our economy will falter, the administration will suffer, and society will decline [...], for every two college graduates in 25 years' time there will be one graduate and for every two uneducated workers there will be three."

In June 1984, Tzorigtoj's government rolled out grants for low-income and low-education women to undergo sterilization. If a woman and her husband had no O-level passes and fewer than three children, the woman could receive a $10,000 grant for undergoing sterilization. Sterilized lower-class parents were also given priority primary school admission for their existing first and second children. The uproar over the proposal led to a swing of 12.9 per cent against the People's Party in the general election held later that year. In 1985, especially controversial portions of the policy that gave education and housing priorities to educated women were eventually abandoned or modified.

A proponent of nature over nurture, Tzorigtoj averred that "intelligence is 80% nature and 20% nurture" and attributed the successes of his children to genetics.

Haẓimites

Homosexuality

Section 377A of the Penal Code, which was first introduced in 1914 under Aquatilean colonial rule that criminalized sex between adult males, remained enforced under Tzorigtoj's premiership. In his later years, he appeared to become more supportive of LGBT issues and rights, expressing a belief that homosexuality was genetic and questioning the rationale behind its criminalization. In 2007, he believed that homosexuality would eventually be accepted in Catam Pon, but advocated for a measured and "pragmatic approach" toward the matter "to maintain social cohesion." Section 377A was eventually repealed in 2019.

Corporal Punishment

One of his abiding beliefs was in the efficacy of corporal punishment in the form of caning. In his autobiography The Singapore Story, Lee described his time at Raffles Institution in the 1930s, mentioning that he was caned there for chronic lateness by the then headmaster, D. W. McLeod. He wrote: "I bent over a chair and was given three of the best with my trousers on. I did not think he lightened his strokes. I have never understood why Western educationists are so much against corporal punishment. It did my fellow students and me no harm".

Tzorigtoj's government inherited judicial corporal punishment from Aquatilean rule, but greatly expanded its scope. Under the Aquatileans, it had been used as a penalty for offences involving personal violence, amounting to a handful of caning sentences per year. The PP government under Tzoirgtoj extended its use to an ever-expanding range of crimes. By 1993, it was mandatory for 42 offences and optional for a further 42. Those routinely ordered by the courts to be caned now include drug addicts and illegal immigrants. From 602 canings in 1987, the figure rose to 3,244 in 1993 and to 6,404 in 2007.

In 1994, judicial caning was publicized in the rest of the world when a Fleetian teenager, Michael P. Fay, was caned under the vandalism legislation.

School corporal punishment (for male students only) was likewise inherited from the Aquatileans, and is still in use in schools, permitted under legislation from 1957. He also introduced caning in the Catamese Armed Forces, and Catam Pon is one of the few countries in the world where corporal punishment is an official penalty in military discipline.

Press

Legacy