Weekend Herald

Tsai Ing-wen’s independen­t streak

China’s push for unificatio­n has given Taiwan’s leader a boost, writes Johnson Lai

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Chinese President Xi Jinping sought to push Taiwanese closer to unificatio­n with a new year speech mixing carrots and sticks. That hasn’t panned out. Instead, his independen­ce-leaning Taiwanese counterpar­t, Tsai Ing-wen, has enjoyed a surge in support following a brutal drubbing of her political party in local elections last year, according to public opinion surveys and interviews.

The residents of this self-governing island, with its vibrant and wellestabl­ished democracy, are as much inclined as ever to resist China’s demands despite rising political, economic and military threats from Beijing.

Xi’s offer to Taiwan “is a total scam”, said Kuo Lin-han, 26, a Chinese Culture University student in Taipei.

Kuo was referring to China’s proposal of a “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t that Xi renewed in his January 2 speech, under which Taiwan would accept Chinese sovereignt­y while being allowed to retain its own economic and legal systems.

That’s based on the framework Hong Kong was granted when it reverted to Chinese rule in 1997, an arrangemen­t that has become increasing­ly frayed as Beijing expands its political influence in the former British colony.

Jarringly for many Taiwanese, Xi mixed his outreach with a reminder that Beijing had no intention of dropping its threat to use military force to bring the island under its control.

Xi’s speech was seized on by Tsai, who went on a four-day media blitz in Taipei that appears to have significan­tly bolstered her support among voters.

In a telephone survey published on January 21 by the Taiwan Public Opinion Foundation, 34.5 per cent of the 1074 respondent­s gave her a thumbs-up, an increase of about 10 percentage points from after the November elections. Two-thirds said they want Taiwan to continue its selfrule or declare formal independen­ce.

Separately, the Taiwan Government’s Mainland Affairs Council found in a January 17 survey of 1078 people that 75.4 per cent oppose “one country, two systems”,

74.3 per cent dispute the “one China” condition for formal dialogue and

77.2 per cent oppose China for holding pledges that it could use force against Taiwan if needed.

Both polls had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 per cent.

“The most important thing is that Xi Jinping made the speech on Taiwan and

Tsai Ing-wen gave a rare response, which received a high level of support,” foundation chairman You Ying-lung said. “The China factor helps her come out of a trough.”

Younger Taiwanese have a firm sense of local identity that stands in the way of China’s idea for unificatio­n, said Wu Yi-hsuan, 27, an energy science and engineerin­g doctoral student.

“We want to be Taiwanese Taiwan rather than Chinese Taiwan,” Wu said, referring to the terminolog­y Beijing often uses for the island that many consider condescend­ing. “Regarding the fact that the People’s Republic of China has never ruled Taiwan for a second, this [two systems] policy of China’s is more an invasive, aggressive and offensive one.”

China ruled Taiwan loosely under the Qing dynasty and the island was made a Japanese colony in 1895. Handed over to Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek’s nationalis­ts at the end of World War II, it split again from the mainland in 1949 during the civil war with the Communist Party under Mao Zedong.

The Communists have regarded Taiwan since then as a breakaway territory that must eventually be brought into the fold. Many commentato­rs say they believe Xi sees that as his historical mission, prompting major increases in China’s military budget and renewed pressure on the island, including cutting off contacts with Tsai’s Government. China’s huge economy and global clout may have some effect, but most Taiwanese are unimpresse­d with how Beijing has followed through on its pledges, said Andrew Yang, secretary-general of the thinktank Chinese Council of Advanced Policy Studies. “Hong Kong is totally controlled by mainland China,” Yang said. “Even though they have their autonomy, they have limited freedom, and certainly there is no democracy in Hong Kong, as far as Taiwanese are concerned.”

“I feel that the China Government is unpredicta­ble, especially after Lee Ming-che was taken away by them,” said Catta Chou, 30, a worker in a non-government­al organisati­on, referring to a Taiwanese citizen sentenced in China in 2017 to five years in prison for spreading prodemocra­cy informatio­n. “China is definitely crazy,” Chou said. Despite such sentiments, China is unlikely to come up with a new proposal in the immediate future, said Yun Sun, East Asia Programme senior associate with the Stimson Centre thinktank in Washington. Beijing’s leaders “know how unpopular the proposal has been and will be”, Sun said. “But before they have a good alternativ­e, this is and will be the biggest deal for them.” Voters had complained before the November 24 midterm elections that Tsai had either grown too distant from China to build economic ties or hadn’t stood up enough to Beijing’s military and diplomatic pressure. Though she won the presidency by a landslide in 2016 — largely due to concerns about China’s influence — and her Democratic Progressiv­e Party received its first-ever legislativ­e majority, Taiwanese voters have in the past shown a willingnes­s to try new approaches.

Many in the business community are already urging Tsai to climb down from her refusal to meet Beijing’s “one China” demand, largely as a way of easing pressure on the island. “One country, two systems could bring more people in and out, and this is good,” said dried fruit merchant Yu Chen-ching, 65. “Otherwise, no one wants to visit Taiwan, and it’s not good for the economy.”

Economic concerns could cause Tsai’s popularity to fade before the 2020 presidenti­al race, said Alex Chiang, internatio­nal relations professor at National Chengchi University in Taipei.

“Because she’s President, she has to be firm on her position toward China, but in reality, Taiwan still has to do business with China,” Chiang said.

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 ?? Photos / AP ?? Supporters of Taiwan’s independen­ce take their message to the streets of Taipei.
Photos / AP Supporters of Taiwan’s independen­ce take their message to the streets of Taipei.
 ??  ?? Her party suffered a drubbing in elections last year but Tsai Ing-wen has enjoyed a surge in support this year.
Her party suffered a drubbing in elections last year but Tsai Ing-wen has enjoyed a surge in support this year.

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