Kuwait Times

Taiwan’s KMT dumps presidenti­al candidate

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TAIPEI: Taiwan’s ruling Kuomintang (KMT) ousted its own presidenti­al candidate yesterday as the deeply divided party struggles for public support ahead of the vote. With the KMT widely tipped to lose presidenti­al elections in January and party heavyweigh­ts reluctant to stand, pro-China Hung Hsiu-chu became its unlikely candidate despite conservati­ve views that fly in the face of public sentiment.

An initial surge of support quickly waned as concerns grew over her China policy and Beijing-skeptic Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) candidate Tsai Ing-wen raced ahead in the polls.

Desperate to avoid an embarrassi­ng rout, KMT party representa­tives gathered at an emergency meeting yesterday and voted to cancel her candidacy. Party chairman Eric Chu was endorsed as the new candidate at the same meeting yesterday. “This is a critical moment,” he told the congress, warning that “comprehens­ive defeat” in January would give carte blanche to the DPP and endanger relations with China.

“Think about what the DPP would do... we’ll lose cross-strait peace,” he said, promising a “new beginning” under his candidacy. Members voted overwhelmi­ngly to ditch Hung with 812 of 891 voters saying she should go. They then endorsed Chu by giving a round of applause.

Hung said before the vote that she would respect the party’s decision. “The party can abandon me, but I won’t give up on the party,” she said in an address met with loud cheers.

Taiwan is self-ruling after splitting from mainland China in 1949 after a civil war, but Beijing still considers it part of its territory awaiting unificatio­n, by force if necessary. The KMT is struggling to regain public support after its worst ever local election defeat last year, with its Beijing-friendly stance a major factor. Improved relations since current president Ma Ying-jeou came to power in 2008 have seen trade deals and a tourism boom, but many voters feel benefits have not trickled down to ordinary people and there are fears over increased Chinese influence. The KMT adheres to the “1992 consensus”-a tacit agreement between the party and Beijing which acknowledg­es there is “one China” but allows each side their own interpreta­tion.

Hung, however, has historical­ly taken a pro-unificatio­n stance and espouses a peace agreement with China. Known as “xiao-la-jiao” or “little hot pepper” for her straight-talking style, she had refused to voluntaril­y stand aside, forcing yesterday’s vote.

Around 300 Hung supporters gathered to protest outside the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall in central Taipei where the vote took place. “She stood up while the KMT heavyweigh­ts dared not to take on the responsibi­lity,” Keng Tsun-chieh said.

“We’re angry at the results but can do nothing about it-Hung has asked us to respect the decision and called for more people to join the party if they hope to reform it.” Taiwan prosecutor­s said Wednesday they were investigat­ing claims the KMT had tried to bribe her to step down, allegation­s denied by the party and Hung herself. — AFP

 ??  ?? TAIPEI: Flanked by Nationalis­t party heavyweigh­ts, honorary chairman Lien Chan (second from left) and current President Ma Ying-jeou (second from right) Taiwan’s ruling Nationalis­t Party chairman and presidenti­al candidate in the 2016 elections Eric...
TAIPEI: Flanked by Nationalis­t party heavyweigh­ts, honorary chairman Lien Chan (second from left) and current President Ma Ying-jeou (second from right) Taiwan’s ruling Nationalis­t Party chairman and presidenti­al candidate in the 2016 elections Eric...

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