Taiwan vote: Tsai’s party suffers loss

Bloomberg

Taiwanese voters delivered President Tsai Ing-wen’s party a resounding defeat in local elections Saturday, ousting it from several key strongholds.
Opposition Kuomintang candidates claimed victory in mayoral races in the major cities of Kaohsiung and Taichung as well as the governor positions in Yilan, Changhua and Yunlin counties, traditionally seen as bastions of support for Tsai’s Democratic Progressive Party. Tsai resigned as chairwoman of the party in the wake of the result.
“The DPP believes in democracy and democracy has taught us a lesson,” Tsai said at a briefing. “We should humbly accept the higher standard the people have set.”
The resounding defeat presents a challenge to Tsai in the final 18 months of her current term.
While the loss of several cities and counties doesn’t directly impinge on her ability to govern, it will likely energise the China-friendly KMT as well as embolden opponents within her own party.
They have long sought for her to abandon a moderate stance on relations with Beijing and push harder for formal independence for the island.
While functionally independent, Taiwan is only officially recognised as a nation by 17 other countries. China claims the island as part of its territory and rejects ties with any country that recognises Taiwanese statehood.
Beijing has broken off all direct communication with the Taipei government after Tsai refused to accept its “one-China” framework when she took power in 2016.
The race for mayor of the capital Taipei City was too close to call, with several hundred votes separating the independent incumbent Ko Wen-je and his KMT challenger Ting Shou-chung.
The loss of Kaohsiung is a particularly strong blow to Tsai’s government. The largest city in the DPP’s southern heartland has been governed by the party ever since 1998. Members of the KMT pointed to Tsai’s controversial labour and pension reforms as well as stagnant wages as the main reasons for their strong performance across the island.
At the same time as the elections, voters were also asked to cast ballots in 10 referendums on issues ranging from energy policy to the name Taiwan adopts in international sporting events.

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