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| REBALANCING︰The DPP head said it is time
  to revisit the questions of a presidential or parliamentary system of
  government as well as boosting the number of lawmakers By
  Chris Wang  /  Staff reporter Thu,
  May 22, 2014 - Page 3 Democratic
  Progressive Party (DPP) Chairman Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌) yesterday said he supported
  a constitutional amendment that does not touch upon the nation’s status and a switch from the current semi-presidential
  system to a parliamentary one. Constitutional
  reform has been a long-term goal of the DPP and the issue has resurfaced
  after recent anti-government protests. Reform
  “is necessary to resolve the conflict between the administrative and
  legislative branches,” Su told reporters. He
  recommended seven areas for reform last week, including increasing the number
  of lawmakers from 113 to between 200 and 300. President
  Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) has criticized the DPP for being inconsistent,
  since it backed the slimming down of the Legislative Yuan from 225 seats to
  113 during the former DPP administration. Ma
  “should not dwell on the past and refuse to plan for the future,” the DPP
  chairman said yesterday. Most
  people support constitutional reform because of the stalemate inside the
  government “as long as the amendment does not touch on general provisions —
  such as the first chapter of the Constitution, and disputes over the nation’s
  name, national flag and territory,” he said. A
  switch from a semi-presidential system, which critics said has turned into a
  “super-presidential system,” to a parliamentary system would be the best way
  to resolve the political deadlock, Su said. The
  basis for suggesting increasing the number of legislative seats is twofold —
  pure mathematics and enforcement of diverse representation, Su said. Under
  the parliamentary system, as many as 50 to 60 lawmakers could become Cabinet
  members, which impedes efficiency, while increasing the number of lawmakers
  would promote better representation by bringing in young politicians, smaller
  political parties and underprivileged groups, he said. Former
  DPP chairperson and presidential candidate Tsai Ing-wen
  (蔡英文),
  who is favored to win the party’s chairmanship
  election on Sunday, said the public’s negative
  impressions of the presidential system are a result of “the president’s abuse
  of power and the lack of checks and balances on him.” However,
  she said that consensus-building can take a long time and she would not want
  to conclude which system is better without a comprehensive public discussion. National Dong Hwa University professor Shih
  Cheng-feng (施正鋒) criticized the
  DPP for flip-flopping. “The DPP favored the presidential system when it was the ruling party
  and it prefers the parliamentary system when it is in opposition,” Shih said. * 《Taipei Times》2014/05/22。 |