People First Party (PFP) Chairman James Soong (宋楚瑜) 
						on Wednesday unveiled
						a list of 10 candidates who will represent the party in 
						the legislative
						elections in January, declaring the PFP’s determination 
						to go its own way,
						despite calls from the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) 
						for the two parties
						to work together.
						
						As the leader of a once close KMT ally, Soong criticized 
						President Ma
						Ying-jeou (馬英九) 
						and the KMT for their poor performance and said he would
						stand as a candidate for president, legislator or 
						legislator-at-large.
						
						Political analyst Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒) 
						said the 69-year-old political
						veteran’s declaration of war against the KMT reflected 
						the PFP’s
						resentment over tensions between the two parties in 
						recent years, with the
						KMT failing to share its political resources with its 
						much smaller ally.
						
						Talk of a “third force” alliance by former president Lee 
						Teng-hui (李登輝)
						who proposed the establishment of a moderate centrist 
						organization to end
						rancorous partisan struggle between pan-blue and 
						pan-green camps, and
						declining support for Ma have boosted Soong’s confidence 
						that the PFP can
						regain political influence, Shih said.
						
						“James Soong is a political animal who doesn’t want to 
						miss the elections.
						Low support for the two parties’ candidates also gives 
						him a perfect reason
						to throw his hat in the ring,” he said.
						
						The PFP’s presentation of its own legislative nominees 
						and Soong’s
						possible presidential candidacy has raised concerns in 
						the KMT that the
						pan-blue vote could be split, making Ma’s bid for 
						re-election even more
						difficult.
						
						Recent polls have shown Ma and Democratic Progressive 
						Party (DPP)
						chairperson and presidential candidate Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) 
						are running
						neck-and-neck.
						
						However, a survey published by the Chinese-language 
						China Times earlier this
						month indicated that Soong would not make much of an 
						impact on the
						presidential election, with a support rate of only 10.3 
						percent of
						prospective voters, making little dent in support for Ma 
						and Tsai, which
						remained at about 33 percent and 28 percent 
						respectively.
						
						Political science professor Liao Da-chi (廖達琪) 
						said Soong was ignoring the
						KMT’s call for joint legislative nominations in order to 
						ensure the PFP’s
						survival as a political party, because only parties with 
						a legislative
						caucus are able to get close to the center of power.
						
						She said that it was more likely Soong would run for 
						president than take
						part in the legislative elections or be listed as a 
						legislator-at-large,
						with helping the PFP obtain a minimum of three seats in 
						the legislature in
						order to form a caucus being his goal.
						
						“Soong has made it clear that he wants to guide reform 
						in the legislature,
						but I don’t think he would take up the fight with only a 
						slim chance of
						winning, especially after his defeat in the election for 
						Taipei mayor,” she
						said.
						
						Soong finished a close second in the 2000 presidential 
						election as an
						independent candidate and in 2004 when he ran as vice 
						presidential candidate
						with the KMT’s Lien Chan (連戰). 
						In contrast, his showing in the 2006
						Taipei mayoral election was a disaster, garnering just 
						4.1 percent of the
						vote.
						
						Facing a pan-blue split, the KMT has said it will 
						continue its efforts to
						undertake joint nominations in districts where 
						candidates have not been
						selected.
						
						PFP Taipei City Councilor -Vivian Huang (黃珊珊), 
						who will run in the
						legislative election in Taipei City, said the PFP has 
						not refused to talk to
						the KMT, but it was impossible for the party to stop the 
						legislator-at-large
						nomination process. She urged the KMT to present a 
						feasible plan on
						collaboration before negotiations start.
						
						Shih said that in order to gain more support, the PFP 
						should seek to
						distinguish itself from the KMT and concentrate on 
						campaign issues
						concerning public policies so that the pro-unification 
						versus
						pro-independence debate does not monopolize the 
						election.
						
 
					
					
					《Taipei 
					Time》Sun, 
					Aug 14, 2011 - Page 3
					
					 
					
					 
					
					 
					
					 
					
					
					                                                                                           
					
                	
					
    				TOP