Page Three

Taiwanese Presidential Election Is a Victory for Democracy

The Daily Signal
Date: January 16, 2020
By: Lee Edwards

Friends of Freedom, all hail a modern-day David—tiny, democratic Taiwan—which continues to confound its big bully of a neighbor—communist China.

Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen overwhelmingly won reelection, The Wall Street Journal reported, by promising to defend the island’s freedoms against threats by mainland China.

Communist officials accused Tsai of stealing victory through smears of her rivals, fearmongering against China, and foreign interference by—surprise—the United States.

Tsai calmly responded that her government was prepared to start a dialogue with Beijing if the communist regime respected Taiwan’s sovereignty and democracy.    [FULL  STORY]

Hong Kong protests biggest influence on Taiwan elections: poll

KMT nomination of pro-Chinese general for Legislative Yuan was second most important factor

 Taiwan News
Date: 2020/01/16
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer
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Protesters in Hong Kong last June.  (AP photo)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – The months of protests in Hong Kong against the extradition bill and against China were the main influence on Taiwan’s Jan. 11 presidential and legislative elections, a poll revealed Thursday (Jan. 16).

The second most crucial factor in deciding the outcome was the opposition Kuomintang’s (KMT) nomination of retired Lieutenant General Wu Sz-huai (吳斯懷) on its list of at-large legislative candidates, CNA reported.

A total of 26.7 percent of eligible voters changed their mind about the presidential candidate they were planning to vote for due to the protests in Hong Kong, according to the poll conducted on behalf of the Taipei City Hsin Min Cross-Strait Research Association (台北市信民兩岸研究協會).

The survey found that the events across the Taiwan Strait had affected the choice of 32.1 percent of “pan-green” voters, 15.6 percent of “pan-blue” voters, and 26.9 percent of independent voters, according to the CNA report.    [FULL  STORY]

Foodpanda couriers stage nationwide protest over pay cut

Focus Taiwan
Date: 01/16/2020
By: Su Mu-chun and Joseph Yeh


Taipei, Jan. 16 (CNA) Foodpanda delivery couriers on Thursday staged a series of coordinated protests across Taiwan against the company's recent decision to reduce their pay.

At one demonstration in front of the Taichung City Government office, a spokesman for Foodpanda couriers in the city told reporters the food delivery company had said recently that their pay would be cut from NT$70 (US$2.3) to NT$57 per delivery, while in Taipei it would be reduced to NT$60, with effect from Thursday.

Liu Yun-cheng (劉雲程) said he and the approximately 50 other couriers at the protest were angry that Foodpanda had not consulted them before making a decision that would significantly reduce their monthly incomes.

In his own case, Liu said, his earnings would drop from NT$2,100 to NT$1,300 per day for the 15 hours that he typically works.    [FULL  STORY]

Alex Tsai probe urged

Taipei Times
Date: Jan 17, 2020
By: Jason Pan  /  Staff reporter

Lawmakers and legal experts yesterday called for an investigation into the involvement of

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Deputy Secretary-General Alex Tsai speaks at a news conference in Taipei on Thursday last week.
Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Deputy Secretary-General Alex Tsai (蔡正元) in the case of self-confessed Chinese spy William Wang Liqiang (王立強), saying that Tsai breached the Anti-infiltration Act (反滲透法) by allegedly collaborating with China to interfere in the recent presidential and legislative elections.

New Power Party Chairman Hsu Yung-ming (徐永明) said he asked the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office to initiate an investigation into Tsai, as he believed the evidence showed that China was using its “representative in Taiwan” to meddle in the spy case and influence the outcome of the elections.

The act prohibits people from acting on the instructions of “infiltration sources” or receiving funding from them for illegal lobbying or disrupting elections, “so our judiciary must find out in this case, whether China provided instructions or funding” to Tsai and whether he used threats or money to make Wang recant his story and framed the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) for it, Hsu said.

DPP legislators Lee Chun-yi (李俊俋) and Wang Ding-yu (王定宇) echoed the call, with Lee saying that Tsai appears to have contravened the National Security Act (國家安全法), as well as laws governing elections and referendums.    [FULL  STORY]

News anchor loses case over Taiwan president’s LSE diploma

Taipei District Court rules Peng's arguments are no grounds for legal case

Taiwan News
Date: 2020/01/15
By: Matthew Strong, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – The Taipei District Court on Wednesday (Jan. 11) rejected a case by news

Media personality Dennis Peng.  (CNA photo)

anchor Dennis Peng (彭文正)alleging that President Tsai Ing-wen’s (蔡英文) diploma and dissertation from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) did not exist.

Last year, academics, media personalities and politicians alleged Tsai had never completed a dissertation and therefore not obtained a PhD degree from the prestigious British institution in 1984.

The court ruled Wednesday that Peng had not explained clearly whether Tsai’s dissertation existed or not, and that whether the president held a PhD degree from the LSE or not was not a legal matter, but purely a matter of truth or not, the Liberty Times reported.
[FULL  STORY8]

KMT chairman resigns amid heated calls for party reform

Focus Taiwan
Date: 01/15/2020
By: Yu Hsiang, Yeh Chen and Chiang Yi-ching
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Wu Den-yih (left)\

Taipei, Jan. 15 (CNA) Opposition Kuomintang (KMT) Chairman Wu Den-yih (吳敦義) resigned Wednesday effective immediately, amid heated protests outside the headquarters by younger party members calling for reform following the party's crushing defeat in the Jan. 11 elections.

The KMT's presidential candidate Han Kuo-yu (韓國瑜) lost by nearly 20 percent to incumbent President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) in the presidential election, and the party took only 38 of the 113 legislative seats. Although that performance represented an increase of three seats and 6 percent more ballots in the party vote, it was still far below the majority Wu had vowed to achieve.

To shoulder responsibility for the failure, Wu and other top-ranking party members resigned en masse. Those resigning included the party Vice Chairman and Secretary General Tseng Yung-chuan (曾永權), and Vice Chairman and former Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin (郝龍斌).

KMT Deputy Secretary-General Tu Chien-teh (杜建德) and acting Director-General of the KMT's Cultural and Communications Committee Cheng Mei-hua (程美華) also resigned with Wu at the party Central Standing Committee meeting held that day.    [FULL  STORY]

New coronavirus spread between married couple

A POSSIBILITY: Only the husband worked at the Wuhan market that most cases were linked to, causing Chinese authorities not to rule out human-to-human transmission

Taipei Times
Date: Jan 16, 2020
By: Lee I-chia  /  Staff reporter

The novel coronavirus 2019 found last month in Wuhan, China, can likely be transmitted person-to-

Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Deputy Director-General Chuang Jen-hsiang talks to reporters at the CDC in Taipei in an undated photograph.
Photo: Lin Hui-chin, Taipei Times

person, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said yesterday, adding that “severe special infectious pneumonia” has been listed as a group 5 notifiable infectious disease.

The viral outbreak reported last month in Wuhan affected 41 people, and the virus was identified and named last week.

“The WHO on Tuesday said that there might have been limited human-to-human transmission of the novel coronavirus,” CDC Director-General Chou Jih-haw (周志浩) said.

“Limited human-to-human transmission” generally means that people within 1m of an infected person for about 10 minutes could contract the virus, so those at risk are usually members of the same household or medical professionals treating infected patients, he said.    [FULL  STORY]

Taipei flower market to stay open 108 hours to meet holiday demand

Radio Taiwan International
Date: 14 January, 2020
By: John Van Trieste

A Taipei flower market is getting ready for a major holiday rush.

The Lunar New Year holiday is approaching, and shoppers across Taiwan are stocking up on food and supplies to get ready.

New Year’s shopping lists vary from household to household, but flowers are one item common to many of them. In the Taipei area at least, shoppers looking for flowers this time of the year are in luck.

Festive flowers are a hit in Taiwan any time of year, but around the Lunar New Year holiday, flower sales see a big uptick. That’s because certain flowers are thought to symbolize a year of luck.

To deal with this big seasonal demand, Taipei’s Jianguo Holiday Flower Market is staying open for 108 hours straight. From midnight on January 20 to noon on January 24—Lunar New Year’s Eve—there will be flowers around the clock.    [FULL  STORY]

After the presidential election in Taiwan, Europe needs to stand by Taiwan

American Enterprise Institute
Date: January 14, 2020
By: Michael Mazza, Visiting Fellow

Op-Ed

This past Saturday, Taiwan’s seventh direct presidential election marked a bright spot for democracy in Asia. In a region that has suffered in places from weak democratic institutions and authoritarian resurgence, Taiwan’s relatively young democracy has proven resilient. Yet storm clouds are gathering. The country’s institutions may be strong, but it faces an ever-present and growing threat from the People’s Republic of China.

Since Tsai Ing-wen’s election to the presidency in 2016, Taiwan has contended with an unrelenting pressure campaign from the PRC. Beijing has used military, diplomatic, and economic tools in an attempt to bring the Tsai government to heel. That government has consistently advocated for maintaining the status quo in the Taiwan Strait, but has refused to acquiesce to a key Beijing demand—that Taipei accept there is only one China, of which Taiwan is a part.

Tsai, who was just elected to a second term in large part due to her promise to defend Taiwan’s democracy, will stick to her guns on the question of “one China.” The Chinese pressure campaign is likely to persist. In the coming years, that campaign may include formal or informal import bans on Taiwanese goods; military provocations; information warfare operations aimed at destabilizing Taiwanese society; and the poaching of diplomatic allies. Since Tsai’s inauguration in 2016, the PRC has swiped seven of Taiwan’s diplomatic allies and Chinese state media has promised that, in the event of her reelection, Beijing would poach the 15 that remain.

These challenges are not insurmountable, but if Taiwan is to weather the storm, it is important that it not stand alone. The United States has been a staunch ally for decades, but European partners, too, have an interest in ensuring that Taiwan remains free and that the Strait remains at peace.
[FULL  STORY]

Taiwan Chooses Freedom, We Must Help Her Secure It

Newsmax
Date: 14 January 2020
By: Frank Gaffney

(Woravit Vijitpanya/Dreamstime)

On Saturday, freedom was powerfully affirmed by the Taiwan’s electorate.

In a stunning rebuke to Communist China and the mainland’s efforts to impose its will on the island — as it has tried to do in Hong Kong, voters gave a 20-point margin of victory to their incumbent President, Tsai Ing-wen, and a strong mandate to defend Taiwan’s sovereignty.

In response, the Chinese Communist Party is insisting that reunification is inevitable, whether the Taiwanese want it or not. The not-so-subtle implication is that force will be used to seize the island. And Beijing is increasingly equipped with ballistic missiles, amphibious ships, sealift and a fleet of some three-thousand passenger aircraft that can enable a no-notice invasion.    [FULL  STORY]