The Borneo Post

Taiwan ruling party opts for moderate new leader

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TAIPEI: Taiwan’s ruling party elected a new chairman on Sunday, choosing a moderate to replace the post vacated by President Tsai Ing-wen after a recent electoral mauling, in a vote closely watched by China and the United States.

Tsai and her Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP) won a 2016 landslide poll, sweeping away a government that had built much closer ties to China over the previous decade.

The result rattled Beijing because Tsai refuses to acknowledg­e that the self-ruled island is part of “one China”.

Beijing cut communicat­ion with her administra­tion, stepped up military drills, poached several of Taiwan’s dwindling diplomatic allies and started economical­ly pressuring the island.

But in November, Tsai’s DPP suffered a string of defeats in local elections, fuelled by a backlash over her domestic reforms and deteriorat­ing economic ties with China, Taiwan’s largest market.

Tsai resigned the party chairmansh­ip but stayed on as president, staying above the fray in the vote to replace her.

On Sunday evening the DPP announced it had chosen Cho Jung-tai, a moderate consensus candidate backed by major party figures.

He comfortabl­y defeated a bid from an openly pro-independen­ce rival who had called for Tsai not to stand again in next year’s presidenti­al election.

J. Michael Cole, a Taipei-based expert with the University of Nottingham’s China Policy Institute, said the vote bolstered Tsai’s chances of standing for a second term.

“Party members voted for continuity,” he told AFP, adding that other countries “will also be reassured.”

“It certainly makes it much more likely that she will be on the ticket for re- election.”

China still sees Taiwan as part of its territory to be reunified, despite the two sides being ruled separately since they split in 1949 after a civil war.

While Beijing has reacted frostily to Tsai, she is from a much more moderate wing within her party that favours talks.

Tsai is squeezed between China and more radical members of her own party who favour pushing for independen­ce — something

It certainly makes it much more likely that she (Tsai) will be on the ticket for reelection. J. Michael Cole, a Taipei-based expert with the University of Nottingham’s China Policy Institute

Taiwan has never formally declared.

Cho’s victory saw off a challenge from You Ying-lung, a polling expert deeply critical of Tsai.

He supported a recent call by four party heavyweigh­ts for Tsai not to seek re- election in 2020.

The win means Tsai is less likely to clash with her party’s new leader. But the DPP remains divided and Tsai has yet to declare whether she will stand again.

A party schism in the run-up to 2020 could favour the Kuomintang, the pro- Beijing party that was turfed out two years ago.

It doubled its seats in November’s elections, even defeating the DPP in its traditiona­l stronghold of Kaohsiung.

A DPP swing towards its more radical wing might also worry Washington.

The US remains Taiwan’s most powerful military ally but maintains that Taipei must not move closer to a formal declaratio­n of independen­ce for fear of stoking a Chinese invasion.

On Wednesday, China’s increasing­ly assertive president Xi Jinping described Taiwan’s unificatio­n with the mainland as “inevitable”, adding that force could be an option if independen­ce was declared. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Japan’s Emperor Akihito (second left) leaves the tomb of his late father emperor Hirohito at the Musashino Imperial Mausoleum in Hachioji, Tokyo. Royal families visited the imperial cemetery to offer prayers to mark the 30th death anniversar­y of Hirohito.— AFP photo
Japan’s Emperor Akihito (second left) leaves the tomb of his late father emperor Hirohito at the Musashino Imperial Mausoleum in Hachioji, Tokyo. Royal families visited the imperial cemetery to offer prayers to mark the 30th death anniversar­y of Hirohito.— AFP photo
 ??  ?? Cho Jung-tai
Cho Jung-tai

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