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Taiwan: ruling party suffers heavy losses in local elections
By John Chan
13 December 2005
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Taiwans ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) suffered
heavy losses in municipal elections held on December 3. The result
was the outcome of the widespread disaffection toward a party
that once claimed to represent a democratic alternative to the
former Kuomintang (KMT) dictatorship on the island.
The election for Taiwans 23 counties and cities took
place under conditions in which the DPP openly acknowledged it
would be repudiated by the electorate. President Chen Shui-bians
approval rating is at an all-time low of just 25 percent. Before
the ballot, Vice President Annette Lu, a founding leader of the
DPP, declared she had psychologically prepared for a defeat.
The DPP only retained six counties and cities, down from the
10 it previously held. One of the partys worst results was
in Taipei county, the largest constituency in Taiwan, which the
DPP has held for 16 years. The DPP candidate Luo Wen-jia, who
was personally backed by Chen, lost by 190,000 votes to his KMT
rival.
The KMT now controls 14 of the 23 local governments, while
three others are held by KMT allies such as the People First Party
(PFP).
The DPPs electoral position has been steadily deteriorating.
Chen won his second term in the March 2004 presidential election
by a margin of just 0.2 percent, capitalising on a sympathy vote
from a suspicious assassination attempt on the eve of the ballot.
Last December, the DPP failed to gain a majority in parliamentary
elections.
In a last-minute effort to garner support before the local
elections, DPP Premier Frank Hsieh outlined an economic stimulus
package on November 30, including establishing direct transport
links with mainland China and promises of low-interest loans for
public construction projects and low-income families.
It had little impact on voters, who turned out in large numbers
to reject the governing party. The turnout rate of 66 percent,
or 8.9 million voters, was considerably higher than the 59 percent
who voted in the last parliamentary election.
DPP chairman Su Tseng-chang tendered his resignation following
the defeat, declaring the result was the warning of the
Taiwanese people to the DPP.
KMT Chairman Ma Ying-jeou labelled the outcome a no-confidence
vote in the ruling party. Enthusing about the prospect of
a KMT victory in the 2008 presidential election, Ma declared:
We are determined to win back Taiwan.
The KMT ruled through a military dictatorship until the 1990s.
Forced to introduce democratic reforms to stave off growing unrest,
it lost power in the 2000 presidential elections. The fact that
the KMT has regained the electoral initiative just five years
later is an indictment of Chen Shui-bian and the DPP.
In government, the DPP government pushed through a pro-market
program of dismantling state-owned and KMT-controlled businesses,
deregulating the financial sector, ending rural subsidies and
cutting social services. Thousands of workers lost their jobs
or experienced a sharp fall in their living standards.
Most recently, a corruption scandal emerged in August which
exposed that high-ranking DPP officials were profiteering from
a subway project in Kaohsiung city through the ruthless exploitation
of hundreds of migrant workers from Thailand.
The DPP represents sections of big business that aspire to
establish Taiwan as an internationally-recognised nation-state.
Taiwan has been ruled separately from China since 1949 but, since
the 1970s, no major power, including the US, has had official
diplomatic relations with Taipei. The majority of countries defer
to the Beijing regimes stanceknown as the one-China
policythat the island is an integral part of China
that must eventually reunite with the mainland.
The KMT also adheres to a one-China policy and is considered
by the Beijing government as more amenable to the possibility
of a Hong Kong-style reunification. China maintains a standing
threat to invade Taiwan if any government on the island attempts
to declare it an independent state.
Throughout Chen Shui-bians time in office, he has repeatedly
provoked tensions with China and with the KMT by hinting at moves
toward independence or by denouncing his opposition as stooges
of Beijing. The main purpose of these appeals of Taiwanese nationalism
has been to divert social and political discontent away from his
government and into anti-China sentiment.
Chen used the same similar tactic during the local election
campaign. He told a rally on November 30: If the opposition
parties win, Taiwan is finished... Taiwan will have to accept
the one-China principle and become a part of China. It will become
a local government, a special administration district like Hong
Kong and Macau.
Among broad layers of the population, however, the demagogy
provoked only anger. Chang Hsin-shan, an employee of an insurance
company in Ilan, a stronghold that the DPP lost to the KMT, told
Reuters: I am only an ordinary person. All I want is to
have a pair of chopsticks and a bowl of rice to eat. I want a
clean government that can make my life better, instead of making
China an issue whenever there is an election.
Even the KMT chairman Ma admitted that the DPP was defeated
by itself. Opposition to the DPP did not, however translate
into enthusiasm for the KMT.
A survey released by the Taiwan-based 1111 Manpower Bank on
November 30 found that 77 percent of respondents felt that election
campaigns were irritating; 58 percent were not
enthusiastic; 75 percent said they were annoyed
and felt the differences between politicians were merely a
war of words; while 41 percent said they dissatisfied with
the empty promises made by candidates.
Economic crisis
The decline of the DPP reflects changing relations with China.
The Bush administration has made clear over recent years it does
not want tensions to erupt in the Taiwan Strait. Embroiled in
the occupation of Iraq and dependent on China as a source of cheap
labour and financier of the huge US deficits, Washington has toned
down its stance against Beijing, at least for now. Without US
military and political support, the majority of the Taiwanese
elite consider even talk of independence to be reckless and harmful.
At the same time, China has become Taiwans largest destination
of investment and the booming trade between the two played a crucial
role in the islands recovery from the Asian financial crisis
in 1997-98. Increasing numbers of Taiwanese businessmen are dissatisfied
with the obstacles posed by the Chen government to closer economic
ties.
Although the DPP supports investment in China, Chen has been
reluctant to allow direct air and shipping links and has maintained
technological restrictions on Taiwanese investors in China on
the grounds of national security. Chens recent
rejection of a number of applications to build high-tech plants
in China alienated powerful corporate interests, including Formosa
Plastics and chipmakers ProMOS Technologies and Powerchip Semiconductor.
Even Chens longstanding supporter, Hsu Wen-long, the founder
of the Chi Mei Group which operates plastic plants in China, criticised
the governments stance towards Beijing.
Greater integration with China is viewed as essential for Taiwans
economic growth, which was just 3.7 percent this year, down from
5.7 percent in 2004. The governments budget deficit is likely
to hit 3.7 percent of Gross Domestic Productup from 3.2
percent last year. Consumer confidence is at a 33-month low, while
the Taiwan stock exchange has fallen 6.4 percent since January.
Richard Vuylsteke, the executive director of the American Chamber
of Commerce in Taipei, told US-based Business Week on December
5: There is a general sense of being stuck in a logjam.
The sentiment within the Taiwanese ruling elite over relations
with China is currently moving in favour of the KMT and proponents
of closer ties. In the aftermath of the local elections, it is
likely that Chen will be compelled to adapt to the demands by
the KMT-controlled parliament for greater efforts to open up talks
with Beijing.
The situation, however, remains highly unstable. An economic
downturn in China or a change in Washingtons policy toward
the mainland could quickly reverse the present trend.
See Also:
Beijing embraces former
arch-enemy
Kuomintang leader visits Chinese mainland
[7 May 2005]
A marriage of political convenience
in Taiwan
[8 March 2005]
Ruling pro-independence
party suffers a blow in Taiwan election
[16 December 2004]
Behind the political
crisis in Taiwan
[7 June 2004]
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