TAIWAN: Where's the oust-Chen campaign headed?

November 17, 1993
Issue 

Eva Cheng

Tainted by allegations of corruption and shady dealings of his family and key staffers, since mid-year President Chen Shui-bian has faced an escalating campaign seeking to unseat him. A week-long protest, culminating in a 300,000-strong rally on September 15 on the doorstep of the president's office in Taipei, has taken the campaign to a new high.

Chen has shown no signs of prematurely ending his presidential term, which is due to last until May 2008. Even in the event of criminal prosecutions he could still hide behind presidential immunity. Though there's not yet proof of wrongdoing on Chen's part, he has made public apologies on no less than three occasions in recent months as the allegations progressively surfaced.

There are undoubtedly rumblings within the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), of which Chen was the chairperson until December 2004 and is still a key leader, but officially the party still strongly backs Chen.

Along with smaller-scale actions in Taiwan's south — Chen's home base — the DPP organised a pro-Chen counter-rally outside the presidential office on September 16, which an estimated 200,000 people attended. However, the oust-Chen campaign is reportedly littered with ex-DPP activists and current rank-and-file DPP members.

Shih Ming-teh, a former DPP chairperson, has led the latest oust-Chen campaign, which has used mass mobilisations as a key means to exert pressure.

This is different from the June initiative led by the Kuomintang (the Nationalist Party, or KMT) and its splinter-turned-ally People's First Party (PFP), which sought to obtain a parliamentary recall of Chen's presidency. For such a motion to succeed, it requires 148 votes in the 255-seat parliament. But the KMT-PFP and allies (known in Taiwan as the "Blue Camp") have so far mustered only 119 votes.

Two days into the seven-day protest, Shih made a call for a national strike — which was carried as front-page news in at least one major national daily — to be the next tactic against Chen.

The trade union movement hasn't rejected the call, but has expressed concern over laws outlawing strikes for reasons other than narrowly defined economic issues such as wages and conditions. However, unions may yet take up the offer and use this rare opening to challenge the repressive laws barring political strikes.

On September 16, Shih vowed to take the oust-Chen protests to five other cities across the island, including Taoyuan, Taichung, Tainan, Kaohsiung and Hualien.

The DPP faces a dilemma over its continuing support for Chen. Chen has been the party's trump card since 1994 when he became mayor of Taipei, the capital. That dependency deepened when Chen won the presidency in 2000 and after his successful, though razor-thin, March 2004 re-election.

In the lead-up to the December 2004 legislative election, the DPP and Chen campaigned hard, seeking to win at least half of the 225 seats. But the DPP and its allies (known as the "Green Camp") secured only 101 seats, compared to the Blue Camp's 113. In the name of taking responsibility for this defeat, Chen resigned as DPP chairperson. However, behind the scenes there may have been a DPP move to dissociate the party from Chen, who by law can't seek re-election as president after two terms anyway.

Without a doubt, the December 2004 election was a vote of poor confidence in Chen and the DPP. In March 2004, there was little sign that Chen would be re-elected, however he managed to scrape through with 50.1% of the vote, and that only after a dramatic and suspicious half-hearted assassination attempt on him and his vice-presidential running mate on election eve. There was widespread speculation that the shooting was staged to generate sympathy for Chen and boost his vote.

A similar trend continued in the December 2005 elections of county mayors and councillors, and town chiefs. The Blue Camp increased their mayorships from 11 to 16, while the Green Camp's plunged from 10 to six.

The December 9 election of the mayors of Taipei and Kaohsiung, the two most important cities in Taiwan, will be the next gauge of oust-Chen/anti-DPP sentiment. If the DPP continues to support Chen, there will be no way to differentiate the two sentiments in the election.

Formed 20 years ago on the back of an anti-dictatorship movement targeting the then-ruling KMT, the DPP promised to stand for democracy and a clean government. Its members braved repression to found the party on September 28, 1986. Since 1949 Taiwan had been under martial law, which ended only in 1987.

Six years into Chen's presidency, Chen and the DPP have not made a substantial difference to the lives of Taiwanese working people. The DPP has never aspired to a program that would address the needs of the country's working-class majority.

Chen has relied heavily on a radical pro-independence strategy during his presidency, provoking Beijing on various occasions. The predictable intimidating reactions unified people behind the president for a short time. Beijing would be happy to see Chen go and has been unusually quiet during the oust-Chen campaign, no doubt watching how it unfolds.

At the September 15 anti-Chen rally, an organiser described Taiwan as the "Taiwan nation" from the stage, attracting the audience's immediate disapproval. This could be a rejection of the high risk involved in provoking Beijing — or it could be that the crowd had little aspiration to formally become a Taiwan nation.


You need 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳, and we need you!

91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳ is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.