Taiwan Elections: What's at stake and why the HK protests could be a deciding factor
Cynthia Ng
January 7, 2020 18:04 MYT
January 7, 2020 18:04 MYT
Twenty-three million Taiwanese will head to the polls this Saturday in a presidential election that would prove decisive on the self-governing island’s relationship with China in the next four years.
At the time of writing, incumbent president President Tsai Ing-wen seemed a shoo-in.
Taiwan’s public opinion is in favour of the governing Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) candidate whose defiant stance towards China has burnished her credentials, particularly in light with the Hong Kong protests which has sparked fear in Taiwan over growing assertiveness of authoritarian Beijing.
The results of a recent media poll in Taiwan shows Tsai with leading with a comfortable margin, garnering 45 percent of votes from respondents to 29 percent for opposition Kuomintang (KMT) candidate Han Kuo-yu. Han’s party favour closer ties with Beijing.
Here’s what you need to know about the contenders in the January 11 polls:
TSAI-ING WEN, TAIWAN PRESIDENT, DPP CANDIDATE
- Made history in 2016 as the first female president in Taiwan
HAN KUO-YU, KMT CANDIDATE
- Han is the candidate of the KMT, which ruled over the island for 55 years before DPP government came to power in 2000
JAMES SOONG, PFP CANDIDATE
- 77-year-old Soong is chairman the small People First Party
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