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Taiwan’s new president faces tough time with China pressure, no majority

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(Reuters) Taiwan’s president-elect Lai Ching-te could face a tough four years in office with no parliament­ary majority, an opposition which wanted to re-start a vexed service trade deal with China and the ever present threat of military action from Beijing.

Lai, from the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP), won on Saturday by a comfortabl­e margin though with less than half the vote but his party lost control of parliament on which Lai will have to rely to pass legislatio­n and spending.

20.Lai takes office on May

China wasted little time in pointing out most electors voted against Lai, with its Taiwan Affairs Office saying that the DPP “cannot represent the mainstream public opinion” on Taiwan, though it did not name Lai directly unlike in the vote’s run-up when it regularly called him a dangerous separatist.

Lin Fei-fan, a former DPP deputy secretary general who is now a senior member of a party think tank, told Reuters he’s “fairly worried” that the new government will have a “very tough” four years especially on China-related

issues.

He said opposition lawmakers, who together form a legislativ­e majority, could step up exchanges with China and ask to restart a controvers­ial service trade pact which Taiwan shelved a decade ago in the face of mass protests.

“That’s what concerns us,” he said. “Local government­s and parliament could form a line to pressure the central government.”

Both Taiwan’s largest opposition party the Kuomintang (KMT) and

small Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) campaigned to re-start the trade services pact.

Neither have confirmed if they will work together in parliament, though the TPP’s chairman Ko Wen-je said on Saturday they will play the role of a “critical minority”.

The defeated KMT candidate Hou Yu-ih did not directly answer a question on the two parties teaming up on Sunday, saying only that “opposition parties have the responsibi­lity of being opposition parties”.

China has rebuffed Lai’s calls for talks. Lai and his party reject Beijing’s sovereignt­y claims and say only Taiwan’s people can decide their future.

Hu Xijin, former editor of the widely-read statebacke­d Chinese newspaper the Global Times who remains a prominent Chinese commentato­r, wrote a social media post that it was irrelevant who Taiwanese voted for when it came to bringing the island under Chinese control ultimately.

 ?? ?? Taiwan President-elect Lai Ching-te, of Democratic Progressiv­e Party’s (DPP) and his running mate Hsiao Bi-khim attend a rally following the victory in the presidenti­al elections, in Taipei, Taiwan January 13, 2024. (Reuters photo)
Taiwan President-elect Lai Ching-te, of Democratic Progressiv­e Party’s (DPP) and his running mate Hsiao Bi-khim attend a rally following the victory in the presidenti­al elections, in Taipei, Taiwan January 13, 2024. (Reuters photo)

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