A LONG TURNAROUND: 
					The weekend’s by-elections were a setback for King Pu-tsung, 
					whom analysts say has failed to improve the party’s 
					electoral campaigns 
					
					By Mo Yan-chih
					
					STAFF REPORTER 
					
					Monday, Mar 01, 2010, Page 3 
					
					 
					The Chinese 
					Nationalist Party’s (KMT) defeat in Saturday’s legislative 
					by-elections could have a domino effect and the party could 
					suffer yet another setback in the special municipality 
					elections at the end of the year if it fails to integrate 
					local factions and present better policies, political 
					observers said.  
					The KMT secured only 
					one of the four legislative seats in Saturday’s by-election, 
					winning Hualien County but losing Taoyuan, Hsinchu and 
					Chiayi to the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). This 
					marked the second electoral defeat for the KMT this year 
					after it lost all three contested seats in another 
					legislative by-election in January. 
					National Dong Hwa 
					University professor Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒) 
					said the power struggle between local factions was a major 
					factor in the KMT’s 
					defeats, adding that KMT 
					Secretary-General 
					King Pu-tsung’s 
					(金溥聰) 
					party reform plans appeared to have failed to win the 
					support of pan-blue voters.  
					In a post-election 
					press conference on Saturday, King said the party had lost 
					the by-elections in Taoyuan and Hsinchu — both pan-blue 
					strongholds — because of intra-party splits.  
					For the Taoyuan 
					race, the KMT nominated former commissioner of the Taoyuan 
					County Department of Cultural Affairs Apollo Chen (陳學聖), 
					who had failed to top polls within the party. Former Taoyuan 
					County councilor Wu Yu-tung (吳餘東) 
					and Jhongli Deputy Mayor Lin Hsiang-mei (林香美) 
					later withdrew from the KMT to join the by-election, 
					splitting the pan-blue vote and contributing to Chen’s 
					defeat. 
					Even though the KMT 
					secured Hualien, it fought hard to suppress the faction led 
					by Hualien County Commissioner Fu Kun-chi (傅崑萁), 
					who gave his full endorsement to independent candidate Shih 
					Sheng-lang (施勝郎). 
					 King said the party refused to make compromises with 
					certain local factions and would press ahead with party 
					reform and nominate candidates with integrity regardless of 
					the electoral outcome.  The KMT’s 
					nomination strategy, however, sent mixed messages, said Lo 
					Chih-cheng (羅致政), 
					a political scientist at Soochow University. 
					The KMT fielded a 
					candidate like Wang Ting-sheng (王廷升), 
					a university professor who narrowly beat the DPP’s 
					Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) 
					in Hualien, but it compromised with local factions that 
					supported former Hsinchu County commissioner Cheng Yung-chin 
					(鄭永金) 
					and nominated his brother Cheng Yung-tang (鄭永堂) 
					in Hsinchu, Lo said. 
					While President Ma 
					Ying-jeou (馬英九), 
					in his capacity as KMT chairman, visited the county many 
					times and King sought Hsinchu County Commissioner Chiu 
					Ching-chun’s 
					(邱鏡淳) 
					support for Cheng Yung-tang, this did not prevent a defeat 
					in Hsinchu. 
					Wang Yeh-li (王業立), 
					a professor at National Taiwan University (NTU), said local 
					factions were an issue within the KMT. 
					“The 
					KMT’s battle against local factions prompted some pan-blue 
					supporters to turn their back on the party. It could create 
					a domino effect and the party could very well lose the five 
					special municipality elections,” he said. 
					Lin Huo-wang (林火旺), 
					also at NTU and who once served as senior advisor to 
					President Ma, saw things differently.“It 
					[the defeat] tells Ma that he should stop trying to woo 
					voters from the pan-green camp,” he said. “A political party 
					will not be able to hold its core support if it drifts 
					further away from its ideals.”
					The KMT has suffered 
					a series of setbacks in elections since regaining power in 
					2008. Before losing the two legislative by-elections, it 
					also suffered defeats in the Miaoli and Yunlin legislative 
					by-elections, as well as the local government elections in 
					December.
					The KMT has 
					struggled to “turn the game around,” Lo said, adding that 
					the momentum could cause a ripple effect that will undermine 
					its prospects in the five special municipality elections at 
					the end of the year, which are considered more important 
					than the two recent legislative by-elections. 
					“More 
					white-collar workers and middle-class people appear to be 
					supporting the opposition. [We should] bear in mind that 
					there are more such voters in the five special 
					municipalities,” Lo said. 
					Saturday’s 
					by-election was also a personal setback for King, who 
					accepted Ma’s invitation to serve as KMT secretary-general 
					in December. Ma appointed King to accelerate party reform 
					and organize election campaigns. The defeats in the two 
					by-elections are expected to exacerbate resentment among 
					party members who have challenged his abilities and disagree 
					with party reform.  
					Ku Chung-hwa (顧忠華), 
					a political scientist at National Chengchi University, said 
					King failed to foster meaningful change within the KMT, 
					adding that the election campaigns he organized were no 
					better than prior to his appointment. The biggest factor 
					behind the KMT’s defeats, Ku said, was the lack of public 
					trust in the Ma administration. 
					The government did a 
					poor job explaining its policies, including its proposed 
					signing of an economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA) 
					with China, he said, adding that the KMT would suffer more 
					defeats in the special municipality elections and the 
					presidential election in 2012 if Ma repeated those mistakes 
					and failed to make policymaking process transparent.Ma 
					yesterday apologized to supporters and vowed to proceed with 
					party reform.