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| By
  Alison Hsiao  /  Staff reporter Mon,
  Dec 01, 2014 - Page 1 Academics
  yesterday were in sync on the bleak outlook for President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) in the remainder of his term, but were at
  loggerheads on how Saturday’s nine-in-one election
  results would affect Beijing’s Taiwan policy with
  the Chinese Nationalist Party’s (KMT) setback at the
  polls, which took many in the party and the public by surprise. There
  was wide agreement among speakers at a forum in Taipei on the elections’
  impact that Ma is officially a lame duck president and that poor governance
  was a major cause of the KMT’s defeat. At
  the time of the symposium — which was hosted by the Institute for National
  Policy Research — it was not clear whether Ma was to resign as KMT chairman. “Last
  year, the KMT charter was amended to make any KMT president the party’s ex
  officio chairman; maybe Ma foresaw the catastrophic result when that policy
  was written,” Ming Chuan
  University professor Wu Hsin-hsing (吳新興) said. “KMT infighting and
  political realignment will surely ensue [after the election failure].” “Ma
  should step down both as KMT chairman and as president,” to avoid a prolonged
  power struggle within the party, said Tang Shao-cheng
  (湯紹成),
  a research fellow in the Institute of International Relations at National Chengchi University. “Having
  [Vice President] Wu Den-yih (吳敦義) take over and consolidate
  party unity is the only chance that the KMT has to make its prospects for the
  2016 presidential election somewhat hopeful,” Tang said. The
  speakers said the KMT’s cross-strait relations program — including the
  service trade pact, which is awaiting legislative review — should not be
  pushed further by a lame-duck president and a governing party that has
  suffered such a drubbing. “The
  pace of cross-strait interaction would decelerate, as the Ma administration
  has lost its legitimacy to deal with China,” Wu said. Chao
  Chien-min (趙建民), director of the Graduate Institute for Sun Yat-sen Thoughts and Mainland China Studies at the
  Chinese Culture University, expressed pessimism over the effect a possible
  halt to dealings with China could have on cross-strait ties. The
  voters have demonstrated with their ballots that neither the economy nor the
  nation’s international space is an important factor for them, Chao said. “As
  the two issues are what the KMT has been championing, with this response, how
  far can the cross-strait relationship go?” Chao added. Chao
  called the KMT’s thrashing “the beginning of a sad story.” As
  cross-strait interactions wane, “businesspeople and talented people might
  migrate,” he said. Chao
  said that during the former Democratic Progressive Party administration,
  Beijing refused to talk to the government, which meant there is no reason to
  believe China will change its Taiwan policy. David
  Huang (黃偉峰),
  an associate research fellow at Academia Sinica,
  said that the economy is the main issue for voters. Huang
  said young people are distressed over skyrocketing housing prices and
  disapprove of “cross-strait brokers” who have been monopolizing dealings with
  China. Nobody
  can deny that having exchanges with China is inevitable and necessary, but
  “it is the [existing] type of cross-strait interactions, which are
  monopolized by princelings, intermediate brokers and big corporations, that
  people are against,” Huang said. “People
  are not convinced that the bonuses of the trade agreement signed with China’s
  government will trickle down to them,” Huang said. Huang
  said that Beijing is flexible enough to refrain from forcing the so-called “1992
  consensus” on pan-green camp political figures. “It
  is when dealing with the DPP as a party and DPP Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) — if party-to-party
  engagement is to be done — that the Chinese
  government might have a problem,” he said. Lin
  Cheng-yi (林正義), also a research fellow at Academia Sinica, said the DPP could follow the US’ suit and “acknowledge” rather than “recognize” the “one
  China” policy and suspend the controversy for the sake of cross-strait
  engagements. At
  another forum on the results of the elections, panelists said the results
  showed voters — especially younger ones — protested government policies via
  their ballots. The
  forum, held by Taiwan Thinktank, said that while
  the DPP benefited from voter anger against the KMT, the main opposition party
  should be cautious that it might also be swept by voters if it cannot
  appreciate the way they are thinking. “Young voters are desperate, because they feel they might only be able
  to work at a drinks shop, making a little more than NT$100 per hour,” said
  Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒), a professor in
  the Department of Indigenous Affairs and Development at National Dong Hwa University. “They are looking for a change, but the
  KMT would not change.” “This time, it might be a tsunami. Next time, it could be a volcanic
  eruption that would sweep away even the DPP if it cannot appeal to voters’
  desires,” Shih said. 
   * 《Taipei Times》2014/12/01。 |