UN Taiwan lawmakers exchange blows in bitter dispute over parliament reforms



Taiwan lawmakers exchange blows in bitter dispute over parliament reforms​

By Ben Blanchard and Fabian Hamacher
May 17, 2024 11:16 AM UTC · Updated 2 hours ago




TAIPEI, May 17 (Reuters) - Taiwanese lawmakers shoved, tackled and hit each other in parliament on Friday in a bitter dispute about reforms to the chamber, just days before President-elect Lai Ching-te takes office without a legislative majority.
Even before votes started to be cast, some lawmakers screamed at and shoved each other outside the legislative chamber, before the action moved onto the floor of parliament itself.
In chaotic scenes, lawmakers surged around the speaker's seat, some leaping over tables and pulling colleagues to the floor. Though calm soon returned, there were more scuffles in the afternoon.
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Lai, who is to be inaugurated on Monday, won January's election, but his Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lost its majority in parliament.
The main opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT), has more seats than the DPP but not enough to form a majority on its own, so it has been working with small Taiwan People's Party (TPP) to promote their mutual ideas.
The opposition wants to give parliament greater scrutiny powers over the government, including a controversial proposal to criminalise officials who are deemed to make false statements in parliament.
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The DPP says the KMT and TPP are improperly trying to force through the proposals without the customary consultation process in what the DPP calls "an unconstitutional abuse of power".



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Item 1 of 5 Taiwan lawmakers argue and exchange blows during a parliamentary session in Taipei, Taiwan May 17, 2024. REUTERS/Ann Wang
[1/5] Taiwan lawmakers argue and exchange blows during a parliamentary session in Taipei, Taiwan May 17, 2024. REUTERS/Ann Wang Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

"Why are we opposed? We want to be able to have discussions, not for there to be only one voice in the country," DPP lawmaker Wang Mei-hui, representing the southern city of Chiayi, told Reuters.
Lawmakers from all three parties were involved in the altercations, and traded accusations about who was to blame.
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The KMT's Jessica Chen, from the Taiwan-administered Kinmen islands that sit next to the Chinese coast, said the reforms were to enable better legislative oversight of the executive branch.
"The DPP does not want this to be passed as they have always been used to monopolising power," she told Reuters, wearing a military-style helmet.
Taiwan is a rambunctious democracy and fighting does on occasion take place in parliament. In 2020, KMT lawmakers threw pig guts onto the chamber's floor in a dispute over easing U.S. pork imports.

The clashes raise the prospect of more turmoil - and parliamentary conflict - ahead for Lai's new government after it takes office.
"I am worried," said the DPP's Wang.
 
Regardless of the contents of the reform, I just don't quite understand what his endgame is?

Like, what did he think would happen? That the bill is now impossible to vote upon?
 
I wish our Congress settled shit this way. Very few Democrats could throw hands. Seeing Chuck Schumer take a right hook Todd Young would be funny as hell.
That's how it used to be in Congress. They'd smack you around with a horsewhip if you talked too much shit on the floor. Those politicians back then had the brains and the etiquette, but they could also handle business when things got heated.
 
You would NEVER see American politicians act even 1/10 as passionate as this. I fucking WISH we did this, then we'd know our politicians actually gave a shit. Bring this back:
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Politics isn't interesting when politicians aren't savagely beating each other or having pistols at dawn.
Andrew Jackson and his VP Marin Van Burn (pictured below) both killed motherfuckers in duels.
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Abe Lincoln used to do stuff like jump out windows to prevent a quorum to stop bills.
Today everything is gay and boring.
 
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