By Shih Hsiu-chuan
					STAFF REPORTER 
					Friday, Sep 11, 2009, Page 3 
					 
					
					
					Known as the first premier in the nation’s history to begin 
					his premiership by saying sorry — he apologized over the 
					announcement of oil and electricity price increases being 
					earlier than scheduled — outgoing premier Liu Chao-shiuan (劉兆玄) 
					told his critics at the time that his term would “end with 
					applause.” 
					
					
					While it may not be the applause he had pictured, 
					acknowledgment has been given for his resignation, taking 
					responsibility for the landslides triggered by floods 
					brought by Typhoon Morakot last month that claimed more than 
					600 lives. Political analysts, however, said Liu had no 
					choice but to leave his post amid a power struggle in the 
					Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and his own lackluster 
					approval ratings.
					
					On Aug. 18, in a bid to calm public anger over the 
					government’s much-criticized typhoon relief operations, 
					President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) 
					promised that officials found to have mishandled the floods 
					would be held responsible and a Cabinet reshuffle would be 
					made “by me and Premier Liu together.”
					
					Speculation on Liu’s future started then, but it soon leaned 
					toward Liu staying in office. Liu took everyone by surprise 
					on Monday when he said that his Cabinet would resign en 
					masse.
					
					How things developed over the few weeks since Liu first 
					offered to step down on Aug. 15 suggests the background to 
					his resignation was not straightforward.
					
					The announcement of Liu’s resignation came six days after he 
					said in an interview that the Cabinet reshuffle would be “a 
					little bigger than small scale.”
					
					In the next two days, Liu did interviews with numerous cable 
					TV stations, which was seen as a move to change the public’s 
					perception of the Cabinet, its image damaged by poor and 
					disorganized relief work.
					
					During the interviews, Liu answered questions without 
					hesitancy on his criteria for selecting new team members. 
					Officials whose overall performance over the past 15 months 
					were under par would be replaced, he said, adding that one 
					of the factors under evaluation would be the Cabinet’s 
					performance when dealing with the global financial crisis.
					
					He also said then that the government would produce a report 
					on its response to the typhoon by the end of the month to 
					serve as a “reference for improvements” and to “restore the 
					truth” regarding the Cabinet’s handling of the disaster “as 
					there are many people jumping to conclusions.”
					
					His remarks were widely interpreted by the media as a sign 
					that Liu would stay on as premier and the size of the 
					Cabinet reshuffle would be scaled down from the “large-scale 
					and comprehensive” overhaul the premier had talked about on 
					Aug. 19.
					
					“From what Liu said, Liu and Ma were thinking differently 
					about the reshuffle. Ma wanted to hold officials responsible 
					by using the reshuffle, but in Liu’s reshuffle plan, 
					apparently that was not factored in,” said an official at 
					the Executive Yuan, who requested anonymity.
					
					The official said Liu resigned to take political 
					responsibility for the government’s poor rescue and relief 
					efforts, but he had still failed to give a clear account of 
					“what was done wrong by which officials.”
					
					“Despite harsh criticism of the government’s performance, 
					Liu had a different opinion. In a closed-door meeting with 
					Master Hsin Yun (星雲) 
					on Aug. 21, he said the government had been ‘wronged,’” the 
					official said.
					
					Spokesmen at both the Executive Yuan and the Presidential 
					Office said Ma and Liu had reached a consensus when Liu 
					offered to resign that Liu stay on temporarily to get the 
					post-disaster reconstruction work on track.
					
					A source close to Liu, however, dismissed those accounts. 
					Liu’s intention to resign had been kept confidential, the 
					source said, and Ma had been under pressure from both KMT 
					headquarters and the party’s legislative caucus to replace 
					Liu.
					
					“Over the 15 months, and especially when his Cabinet was 
					under fire following the flooding, Liu, as an individual 
					unaffiliated with any faction of the KMT, felt that it was 
					difficult to implement policies,” the source said. “Liu 
					therefore suggested that Ma choose someone who had the party 
					behind him.”
					
					Director of Liu’s office, Ting Nai-chi (丁乃琪), 
					on the other hand, denied any drama involving Liu’s 
					resignation.
					
					Saying that she was the only official at the Executive Yuan 
					aware of Liu’s intention to resign, Ting said Liu “had been 
					adamant about his resignation from the very beginning.”
					
					Aside from Ting, Vice Premier Paul Chiu (邱正雄) 
					was the only Cabinet official informed of Liu’s decision to 
					resign prior to Liu’s public announcement on Monday.
					
					Ting, Chiu, and Chiu’s chief secretary Chen Chao-kai (陳肇凱) 
					all declined to comment on when Ma accepted Liu’s 
					resignation, giving the same vague answer that “it was one 
					day last week.”
					
					Sources said there was a significant ratcheting up of 
					pressure on Ma to replace Liu by the party following Liu’s 
					“small reshuffle” remarks last Tuesday, which failed to meet 
					the public’s expectations.
					
					Ting denied the speculation, saying that the message that 
					Liu would stay in office and the reshuffle would be 
					small-scale were done to maintain the morale of officials 
					executing imperative reconstruction work while worrying 
					about a possible Cabinet reshuffle.
					
					National Taiwan University political science professor Chang 
					Lin-cheng (張麟徵) 
					said that “people who know Liu well understand that he would 
					choose to leave even if Ma asked him to stay.”
					
					“Given plummeting approval ratings for Liu, Ma and the 
					government, Liu knew that staying on would harm not only 
					himself, but also Ma,” Chang said.
					
					Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒), 
					a political commentator, said there was no alternative for 
					Ma but to replace Liu, because only by doing so would it be 
					possible to boost Ma’s declining approval rating. 
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