Bloomberg
A former premier and vocal proponent of independence for Taiwan will challenge his former boss, President Tsai Ing-wen, for the ruling party’s nomination, ensuring the island’s tense relationship with China will be a central focus of the presidential campaign.
Former Premier Lai Ching-te said in a text message that he would vie for the Democratic Progressive Party’s backing in the election slated for next year.
Lai — a former mayor of the southern Taiwanese city of Tainan who once described himself as an “independence worker†— resigned in January, weeks after the party suffered a resounding loss in local elections.
“Taiwan is facing a more precarious situation in the face of China’s threats,†Lai said, after submitting his nomination application at DPP headquarters in Taipei. “Taiwan doesn’t want to be a second Hong Kong or Tibet. The elections in 2020 are critical to Taiwan’s future.â€
Tsai, who is almost three years into her first term, has said she plans to seek re-election despite receiving support of less than 30 percent in most recent polls.
Although Tsai stepped down as the DPP leader after losing several counties and cities to the more China-friendly Kuomintang opposition in November, she had so far faced no obvious challengers from within the party.
Tsai spokesman Xavier Chang said via text message that Lai’s candidacy doesn’t change the president’s plans to run. Tsai said in a Facebook post that she planned to submit her formal application to run before the end of the week. The DPP is scheduled to announce its candidate April 17.
Lai’s candidacy could make the issue of legal independence for the democratically run island a central campaign theme, just as an increasingly assertive Chinese President Xi Jinping pushes Taiwan for talks on eventual unification. Xi suggested earlier this year that mainland China and Taiwan enter into “in-depth democratic consultations†and work toward unification, the clearest signal yet that he wants to settle the 70-year dispute.
Beijing has said any moves by Taiwan to formalise its status as a sovereign state separate from mainland China would be grounds for invasion. The two split during the Chinese civil war in 1949.
While the DPP officially supports Taiwan’s independence, Tsai has so far avoided outright moves that might risk provoking the Communist Party in Beijing, saying that she wants to maintain the status quo. That has frustrated some within her party who support a more decisive break from the mainland.