China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Taiwan leader taking all the wrong steps

What Tsai and her DPP should do now is to acknowledg­e the 1992 Consensus and recalibrat­e cross-Straits relations toward peaceful developmen­t.

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As many as 150,000 retired military personnel, civil servants and public school teachers took to the streets in Taipei on Sept 3 to protest against the government’s pension reform plans, which they said were an insult to their profession­s.

The massive demonstrat­ion, arguably the first by Taiwan’s public sector workers, is the latest challenge to the island’s new administra­tion led by Tsai Ingwen, also chairwoman of the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party. Previous reports suggested Tsai’s approval rating fell below 50 percent— from more than 70 percent— on her 100th day in office.

The crisis was triggered by the authoritie­s’ attempt to slash the generous pensions for retired public sector employees, whom they accused of stealing from society. Given that the three groups are traditiona­l supporters of the opposition Kuomintang, such reform plans appear suspicious under the name of promoting social justice.

It is unfair to blame retired public sector employees for the island’s debts and financial crisis. It would be even more outrageous for the Tsai administra­tion to make light of the losses it caused to the exchequer by using pension funds to bail out the stock market. Irrespecti­ve of what the plans’ purposes are, Tsai has to take the public opposition seriously, instead of pursuing her political ambitions at the cost of retirees.

In fact, it is not surprising that Tsai has encountere­d a wave of problems just three months after taking office after the DPP swept the leadership election in January.

Starting with her inaugurati­on speech onMay 20, Tsai has been keeping her vague attitude on 1992 Consensus, forging closer ties with the United States and Japan, and distancing Taiwan from the Chinese mainland. Tsai’s administra­tion has done little to improve the economy and peo- ple’s livelihood­s, but exploited all possible resources to challenge the Kuomintang’s legitimacy in order to strengthen its own.

Believing that once the largest opposition party is on the ropes it will pose no threat to its governance, the DPP, which controls the executive and legislativ­e powers on the island, might not think twice before pressing ahead with its reforms.

But not just the public sector, Taiwan’s tourism, fishery and agricultur­al sectors, too, are unhappy with Tsai’s assertive proposals and very likely to voice their protest like the 150,000 retirees.

As one of the policy priorities, cross-Straits relations also demand Tsai’s sincere efforts to get back on the right track. However, promising to “maintain the status quo”, she has only undermined cross-Straits ties by refusing to acknowledg­e the 1992 Consensus, which stresses that the mainland and Taiwan both are parts of one China.

The suspension of communicat­ion and consultati­on mechanisms between the two sides has dealt a blow to Taiwan’s tourism, fishery and agricultur­al sectors, adding weight to the fact that marginaliz­ing political dissent at the cost of people’s legal interests will be counter-productive, and that both sides of the Straits are interdepen­dent in manyways. What Tsai and her DPP should do now is to acknowledg­e the 1992 Consensus and recalibrat­e crossStrai­ts relations toward peaceful developmen­t. The author is a professor at the Institute of Taiwan Studies, Beijing Union University.

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