20100330 Political parties move to attract young candidates
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Political parties move to attract young candidates

By Vincent Y. Chao
STAFF REPORTER
Tuesday, Mar 30, 2010, Page 3
 

“The problem for them is that many of the older generation they are up against have status and connections within their electoral districts. It’s hard for the young candidates to match them in terms of resources or name recognition.”— Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) official

 


Democratic Progressive Party members protest in front of the legislature in Taipei yesterday against the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) youth league’s commemoration of Youth Day yesterday.
PHOTO: CHIEN JUNG-FONG, TAIPEI TIMES



For 34-year-old Chang Chia-ling (張嘉玲), a typical weekday consists of sitting down with supporters, attending press conferences and protesting in front of the Presidential Office.

The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) contender for city councilor in Sinbei City is one of a host of fresh faces that both the DPP and the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) are fostering before the year-end special municipality elections.

Chang and the dozens of other younger candidates in the December elections are part of a growing chorus of political figures that both parties have been trying to attract — and retain — to break free of the traditional political mold and engage an increasingly politically apathetic younger generation.

“We want to give younger people who care about politics and who have ideas about how this country should be run a chance to prove themselves,” KMT officials in charge of candidate recruitment told the Taipei Times.

The KMT is mulling a policy that would give contenders aged under the age of 35 a 10 percent boost in internal party polls used in the nomination process. KMT officials said the policy would be finalized before the December elections.

The DPP is also considering a proposal backed by senior party members that would see the DPP also give a 10 percent boost to aspiring candidates making their first mark in politics.

DPP officials said that sitting politicians, including councilors and lawmakers, would not be eligible for the boost as it was aimed at bringing new faces into a party that had been accused last month of “recycling candidates.”

While officials from both parties say that interest from the younger generation has been growing, they acknowledge that few who show an interest in politics end up running.

“The problem for them is that many of the older generation they are up against have status and connections within their electoral districts. It’s hard for the young candidates to match them in terms of resources or name recognition,” a KMT official said.

Li Mei-jhen (李眉蓁), who is ­vying for a KMT city councilor nomination, said one problem the KMT faced was its long tradition of picking candidates with the most local connections, even for party posts, which excludes many of the younger generation.

To address the problem, former deputy head of the KMT’s youth group Lin Kuo-cheng (林國正) has called for the party to increase the percentage boost even further, saying that the current proposal would not make a noticeable difference in youth participation.

DPP contender for city councilor in Kaohsiung City, Chen Cheng-wen (陳政聞), agreed, but added that methods other than opinion polls existed that could bring in fresh faces.

“Some of the more substantive measures that can help the younger generation include participation in party politics and other party posts,” the former DPP Kaohsiung branch head said.

However, this realization does not seem to have deterred some potential candidates from coming up with new and increasingly creative tactics to score media coverage to bolster their name recognition.

Former DPP legislator Tsai Chi-fang’s (蔡啟芳) son, Tsai Yi-yu (蔡易餘), drew media attention for a rumored bid for lawmaker earlier this month after he unveiled a large billboard in Taipei complaining that President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) policies had left him without a girlfriend.

Political candidates, especially among the younger generation, have many different styles, Chang said, but added that what is most important “is a will to work hard, to earn the voters’ trust and to work for Taiwan’s future.”

“This is what matters, regardless if you are a young candidate or an older candidate,” Chang said. “If you can do this, the 10 percent boost becomes irrelevant.”

 

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