Oman Daily Observer

A vote for more economic unity

- By James Pomfret

TAIWAN’S incumbent president was reelected yesterday as official tallies showed he held a near-unassailab­le lead in the vote-count and the opposition conceded defeat.

The result, which points to a continuati­on of the detente between Taiwan and China, should reassure both Beijing and Washington at a time of political transition for both superpower­s.

The elections had been expected to be tight, but the Central Election Commission said that with most votes counted, the Nationalis­t Party’s Ma Ying-jeou, who has fostered warmer ties with China, had about 51.5 per cent of the vote versus about 45.7 per cent for Tsai Ing-wen of the opposition Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP).

“We have won,” Ma, 61, shouted to supporters at party headquarte­rs as they cheered and clapped in pouring rain.

“In the next four years, cross-strait relations will be more peaceful, with greater mutual trust and the chance of conflict will be less.”

Tsai conceded defeat and said she was quitting as DPP party chief. However, Ma’s victory will be much reduced from the near 17-point margin he had over the DPP at the last election in 2008.

But the Nationalis­t Party was also projected to get a clear majority in parliament, which should give Ma a fillip in pushing through policy. Television said the Nationalis­ts would get about 65 seats in the 113-member legislatur­e, although that is also lower than the 81 seats they had in the outgoing house.

“We will continue to let economic growth flourish, protect cross-strait peace and friendly relations to achieve more concrete results in cooperatio­n in important areas,” said Lien Chan, the honorary chairman of the Nationalis­ts.

But in an acknowledg­ment of the reduced majority, he added: “We need to discuss thoroughly the criticism the voters have handed to us.”

Even early in the day, Ma radiated confidence.

“I see a little sunshine now,” he told reporters as he cast his vote at a polling station in a Taipei church after a slight drizzle eased.

Opposition leader Tsai was also confident but appeared to have lost ground to the incumbent after a strong showing in the campaign because of perception­s that she was not as inclined to closer economic integratio­n with China.

The DPP’S independen­celeaning stance has long angered Beijing, which deems Taiwan a renegade province and considers US arms sales to the self-ruled island as the top obstacle to improved ties between the United States and China, now the world’s two biggest economies. Under Ma, the Nationalis­ts have pursued detente with China — closer economic ties while vowing not to declare independen­ce nor seek unificatio­n.

A Ma victory should also go down well in the United States, which holds presidenti­al elections later this year, as Washington would be keen to take at least one potential irritant in bilateral ties with China off the table.

Like the run-up to the election, the voting was smooth. Unlike in 1996, when China fired missiles into waters off Taiwan before the island’s first direct presidenti­al election, Beijing has learnt to temper any response to avoid antagonisi­ng voters into backing the DPP.

Nearly 200,000 Taiwanese returned from overseas for the poll, cramming flights in a last minute rush to cast ballots. In a measure of the easing ties with the mainland, most of them came over from China.

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