CN Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen Wins Reelection With Record Support - Incumbent’s success marks dramatic comeback for party that campaigned against unification with China


Tsai Ing-wen has won reelection as President of Taiwan on Saturday night by a landslide, defeating the populist challenge of her pro-China opponent in a campaign dominated by how to handle growing pressure from Beijing.

As of 8:30 p.m. local time, with the vote still being tallied, she had received a record 7.7 million votes. Han Kuo-yu, of the Kuomintang Party (KMT), had received about 5.2 million votes at that time, according to Bloomberg. Han told supporters Saturday that he called Tsai to congratulate her on her victory, the Associated Press reported.

It’s uncertain what Tsai’s victory meansfor cross-Strait ties. The self-governing island of 23 million—the world’s 21st biggest economy and an influential technology hub—is an unofficial U.S. ally and a potential flashpoint amid deteriorating relations between Beijing and Washington.

In an exclusive interview with TIME during the campaign, Tsai acknowledges that cross relations with China “have evolved into a regional and even a global issue” given Beijing’s “political expansionist ambitions.”

Tsai, a 63-year-old former lawyer and academic, is mistrusted by China’s ruling Communist Party, which considers Taiwan a wayward province to be politically reunited—by force if necessary. The sweet potato-shaped island has governed itself since effectively splitting from the mainland in 1949 following China’s civil war.

Although ties between the estranged neighbors have warmed over the past few decades, China has dialed up diplomatic and economic pressure since Tsai first came to power in 2016, as her Democratic Progressive Party (DDP) refuses to acknowledge that Taiwan and the mainland belong to “One China,” as the rival Nationalist Party maintains.

Tsai’s victory speech imparted a firm message of independence.

“Today I want to once again remind the Beijing authorities that peace, parity, democracy and dialogue are the keys to stability,” Tsai said, according to the AP. “I want the Beijing authorities to know that democratic Taiwan and our democratically elected government will never concede to threats.”

“I hope that Beijing will show its goodwill,” she said and that Taiwan’s voters have “shown that when our sovereignty and democracy are threatened, the Taiwan people will shout our determination even more loudly.”

Over Tsai’s first term, China persuaded seven diplomatic allies of Taipei to instead recognize Beijing, so that only 15 remain today. In August, it also banned independent Chinese travelers from visiting Taiwan—a significant income stream for the vital tourism industry.

China’s strongman President Xi Jinping has called political reunification—an idea opposed by some 80% of Taiwan citizens—“the great trend of history,” and senior Chinese officials have threatened“reunifying Taiwan by force” with greater urgency over recent months.

As such, Tsai’s election triumph doesn’t solve the issue of Beijing’s aggression. Nevertheless, Tsai expressed confidence that despite dwindling official recognition on the world stage, support for Taiwan’s de facto independence remains robust.

“If a free, democratic Taiwan that stands for universal values were to face aggression from China, I feel sure that countries around would be highly concerned and hope very much that Taiwan gets the assistance it needs,” she told TIME in Taipei’s Presidential office building.

“I think the small and medium size countries in the region would also think that if it is Taiwan today, it might be them tomorrow.”

However, despite tightened economic screws, tourist arrivals actually grew 7% last year to a record 11.8 million — a sign that Tsai’s policy of prioritizing ties with other Asian nations maybe bearing fruit. Growth has also exceeded exceptions; in November, the government boosted its 2020 forecast from 2.58 to 2.72%. In addition, the Taiwanese dollar is currently at an 18-month high, 2019 was the best year for Taiwanese stocks in a decade and government bond yields are near all-time lows.

This no doubt helped propel Tsai’s resurgence after mid-term doldrums that saw her popularity slip to 30 points behind her Nationalist rival at one stage. This slide owed a lot to drastic and fiercely unpopular reforms of Taiwan’s generous state pension system, which led to disastrous local elections for her DPP in 2018.

Regarding the pension reform, “it was not something that we could avoid just because it was controversial,” presidential spokesman Alex Huang told TIME during the campaign, emphasizing how close the situation had come to catastrophe. “For any country, if the domestic pension system goes bankrupt it would have a bad effect on the entire country and economy, and you wouldn’t have seen the foreign investment we have been seeing in Taiwan.”

Aside from an economic bounce, Tsai also benefited from the turmoil embroiling Hong Kong, where for six months pro-democracy protesters have agitated for greater democracy. Last January, Jinping proposed the same system of semi-autonomy—known as “One Country, Two System”—that governs the former British colony as a possible route of reunification for Taiwan.

Tsai was swift to rebuff that suggestion—a decision vindicated by the tear gas and rubber bullets that have since engulfed the banking and trading entrepôt, boosting her popularity especially amongst younger Taiwanese.

For Shelley Rigger, an East Asia expert at Davidson College in North Carolina and author of Why Taiwan Matters, the Hong Kong protests reminded Taiwan voters, “We can’t be too complacent, and we don’t want to get back to a situation where our leaders are unwilling to stand up to Beijing.”

Tsai also had to fend off a deluge of fake news stories and misogynistic attacks—claiming that an unmarried, childless woman couldn’t possibly care about the next generation—during the campaign. Her administration and independent analysts maintain they stem from the Beijing authorities, though they deny any such interference.
 
The KMT (losers) has been run very poorly for several years, and Tsai Ing-wen has not been a complete disaster. And as others have pointed out, China is not exactly happy with the more independence minded DPP wining in a landslide.

I recommend https://report.tw/ for RoC election materials.

The problem with the KMT is that they're the party of the Han minority and want to reunify with China.

Under the Chiang dictatorship the Han minority was given a privileged status and the countries identity as Han was emphasized. Most Taiwanese are not Han and do not like being oppressed.

Anti-Han sentiment was mixed with democratic views as these people tended to hang out in the same prisons and pubs. Taiwan will probably get rid of their China claim in the coming decades as this national identity matures.
 
Like many women of her age in developed countries, she has a whole herd of cats as surrogate children, ie furbabies. because she sacrificed her family life to build a professional career]

Nah; a real cat lady's house smells like cat piss and shattered dreams.
 
"Tsai also had to fend off a deluge of fake news stories and misogynistic attacks—claiming that an unmarried, childless woman couldn’t possibly care about the next generation—during the campaign."

Reminds me of Julia Gillard's (debatable) successful campaign for PM. Can't recall much of what was said back then, but I remember a similar sentiment being expressed by certain corners of the MSM.
 
The problem with the KMT is that they're the party of the Han minority and want to reunify with China.

Under the Chiang dictatorship the Han minority was given a privileged status and the countries identity as Han was emphasized. Most Taiwanese are not Han and do not like being oppressed.

Anti-Han sentiment was mixed with democratic views as these people tended to hang out in the same prisons and pubs. Taiwan will probably get rid of their China claim in the coming decades as this national identity matures.
Mainly correct summation, but some mistake regarding the terminology. The KMT is the party of ROC citizens whose parents or grandparents fled to the island from Mainland China in 1949 due to the communist victory on the Mainland, regardless of if they are Han Chinese or not. In their retreat to Taiwan, the KMT brought over a lot of the Chinese Muslim warlords and their armies, for example, who established the first mosques in Taiwan.

Like the 1949 wave of KMT refugees, most of the Taiwanese people are also ethnically Han Chinese, but their ancestors immigrated to the island in the Qing or Ming dynasty era from Fujian Province, whereas most of the KMT refugees were from other provinces of China and thus did not speak the Fujianese-based Taiwanese dialect. Furthermore, due to 50 years of cross-straits isolation during Japanese colonial rule, the culture of the Han Chinese in Taiwan had begun to diverge from the Mainland Chinese, as they missed out on a lot of the formative cultural experiences of the Republic of China, like the standardization of Mandarin dialect as the official language.

Relatively few of the pre-1949 Taiwanese people are of non-Han Chinese origin. There's a sizable and prosperous minority of Hakka hill-folk, but they assimilate very easily into the Fujian-origin Han majority of the modern society, and then there's a much smaller scattering of Austronesian aboriginals who have also been mostly assimilated and except for their Christian and animist religion, can't really be distinguished much from other Taiwanese any more.
 
I wonder if this victory was spurred on by the Taiwanese kpop debacle that happened two three years ago.

Singer’s Apology for Waving Taiwan Flag Stirs Backlash of Its Own
BEIJING — A teenage singer made headlines in China and on her home island of Taiwan this weekend, but not for the winsome K-pop music that she hoped would attract fans. Instead, a glum, shaken apology after a controversy over a flag landed the singer, Chou Tzu-yu, in the maw of tensions between China and Taiwan, just as the island voted to elect an independence-leaning president on Saturday.



People in Taiwan are very angry about this,” said Hsiao Yi-ci, 29, a painter. “This sort of oppression from China really upsets people,” she said. “If you are abroad and can’t show your flag, can’t represent your country, that makes Taiwanese people very afraid.”

“The Chou Tzu-yu incident makes Taiwan people realize they are not the same as Chinese people,” said Liu Che-lin, 34, a musician.


 
Like many women of her age in developed countries, she has a whole herd of cats as surrogate children, ie furbabies. because she sacrificed her family life to build a professional career
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At least she's not Nancy Pelosi.
 
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I wonder if this victory was spurred on by the Taiwanese kpop debacle that happened two three years ago.

Singer’s Apology for Waving Taiwan Flag Stirs Backlash of Its Own
BEIJING — A teenage singer made headlines in China and on her home island of Taiwan this weekend, but not for the winsome K-pop music that she hoped would attract fans. Instead, a glum, shaken apology after a controversy over a flag landed the singer, Chou Tzu-yu, in the maw of tensions between China and Taiwan, just as the island voted to elect an independence-leaning president on Saturday.



People in Taiwan are very angry about this,” said Hsiao Yi-ci, 29, a painter. “This sort of oppression from China really upsets people,” she said. “If you are abroad and can’t show your flag, can’t represent your country, that makes Taiwanese people very afraid.”

“The Chou Tzu-yu incident makes Taiwan people realize they are not the same as Chinese people,” said Liu Che-lin, 34, a musician.


Eh, I'd fuck her.
 
According to this video the Chinese didn’t give much attention to who won:


Then again this user claimed Vietnam was ungrateful for the PRC during the War with US so take what you will
 
According to this video the Chinese didn’t give much attention to who won:


Then again this user claimed Vietnam was ungrateful for the PRC during the War with US so take what you will
That would be pretty reasonable considering that the PRC invaded Vietnam shortly after their war with the US in support of, of all people, Pol Pot.
 
Ironic that Taiwan's only options are a CCP puppet or libtard globohomo catlady...a people whose only political goal is to become a nation and they don't have strong nationalist candidate. Sad!
I'm pretty sure it's a weirdo cultural mix of different people that have settled the island so it's not exactly the kind of place where you're gonna find a lot of ethnonationalists. Unless you just think they're tards for not wanting to Make Taiwan Abbo Again this assessment seems out of place.
 
They probably realized fairly early after their exile that they don't have the military to reconquer China, but they're probably still holding hope that the day will come where there's another world war where they can side with the enemies of the PRC, or that a popular revolt will topple the communists and they can swoop in and run for office

They were still trying to retake the mainland after getting repeatedly bashed by Red China in the 50s and being told by the United States that it was a stupid idea. Chiang Kai-shek must've had dementia at this point.
 
I remember this bulldyke triggered a bunch of overseas Chinese Chicom sympathizers and (((narrators))) of the mainland's "peaceful rise," because she called Trump during his transition period.

If the KMT didn't become such an unelectable joke and Computerpartsland didn't have the backing of the U.S. and subsequently Japan and even South Korea, Miss Soy Queen wouldn't even be elected anywhere on the island that looks like a flaccid penis.
 
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