The Sun (Malaysia)

KMT picks ‘little hot pepper’ for presidenti­al race

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TAIPEI: Taiwan’s ruling Kuomintang (KMT) officially endorsed wildcard candidate Hung Hsiu-chu ( pix) yesterday to run for president next year, as the deeply divided party faces a battle to regain public support.

Known as xiao-la-jiao or “little hot pepper” for her straight-talking style, Hung’s conservati­ve pro-China views fly in the face of voter sentiment as fears grow over increased Beijing influence.

Concern about the island’s warming ties with China was one reason behind the Beijing-friendly KMT’s rout in November local elections, a barometer for the presidenti­al vote next January.

With the party tipped for another defeat, KMT big hitters have sat on the sidelines, leaving unlikely Hung the only candidate.

She was endorsed to applause and a standing ovation at a KMT party congress in Taipei, the final rubber stamp after the standing committee backed her last month.

“As long as we stand together, we can win the election,” Hung said in a week which saw five KMT legislator­s who had criticised the party expelled.

She sought to allay fears over her China policy – which has even alienated some in her own party – taking a more moderate line.

“We will bear people’s opinions in mind and give priority to Taiwan’s interests, and continue fighting for the peaceful developmen­t of both sides,” she said.

Hung will take on Tsai Ingwen, chairman of the Beijingsce­ptic main opposition the Democratic Progressiv­e Party, with Taiwan’s China policy at the heart of the duel. Other candidates are also set to enter the race, but the two women are currently the major contenders, with veteran Tsai the clear favourite.

If either won, it would be the first time a woman led the island.

Hung, currently deputy parliament­ary speaker, saw her popularity soar after she put in her nomination bid.

But it has since dipped on concern over her China message.

Taiwan split from China in 1949 after a civil war and is self-ruling, but Beijing still sees the island as part of its territory awaiting reunificat­ion – by force if necessary.

The KMT espouses a “one China, different interpreta­tion” model, tacitly agreeing with Beijing known as the “1992 consensus”, which avoids a declaratio­n of independen­ce but asserts the island’s sovereignt­y.

Hung, however, has historical­ly taken a pro-unificatio­n stance. – AFP

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