New party is kingmaker in Taiwan parly
– Taiwan’s freshly elected lawmakers will meet from tomorrow, with a new party enjoying an outsized influence over legislation after breaking through the self-ruled island’s long-entrenched two-party system.
Taiwan’s political landscape has been dominated for decades by two parties, the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and the opposition Kuomintang (KMT), both defined by how they would approach the democratic island’s relationship with China, which claims Taiwan as its territory.
The DPP’s Lai Ching-te won this month’s election to be president, but neither of the major parties won enough seats to secure a majority in the 113-seat legislature. Taiwan People’s Party’s (TPP) Ko Wen-je came last in the race to be president, but his party secured eight seats and a quarter of the votes to emerge as kingmaker in the new legislature.
When newly elected legislators take their seats on Thursday, the first order of business will be to elect the speaker – an important role that will define Taiwan’s legislative agenda. After that, whichever party has the TPP’s support will have enough votes to pass legislation.
“For the first time, you have a viable third party option that... gets to play that decisive kingmaking minority party status in the parliament,” said political analyst Wen-ti Sung.
TPP’s arrival could mean a more diverse and vibrant democratic scene for Taiwan’s future – or it could also translate to a logjam in parliament. But “a greater share of voters who previously felt under-represented by existing political parties may now feel... a greater sense of empowerment”, Sung said.
The ruling DPP has long portrayed itself as defenders of Taiwan’s democracy, with current President Tsai Ing-wen and president-elect Lai, her deputy, maintaining that the island is “already independent”.
Beijing rejects this position, and has cut off all high-level communications since Tsai’s election in 2016. It has also upped the rhetoric in recent years on Taiwan’s “unification”, and increased military and political pressures on the island.
Opposition KMT advocates for a more cooperative line, and sees the island’s economic prosperity interlinked with closer ties with China.
Ko has differentiated himself by saying it is pointless to argue over “unification” or “independence”, when there are “real problems” in Taiwan. He is focusing his campaign on everyday issues like soaring housing costs and stagnating wages.
On Monday, both KMT and DPP’s prospective speaker candidates visited TPP’s legislators to seek their backing, but no decision was announced. –