The Citizen (KZN)

New party is kingmaker in Taiwan parly

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– 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. –

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