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Saturday¡¦s elections show KMT weaknesses
By James Wang ¤ý´º¥°
If we look at the final results of Saturday¡¦s five special municipality
elections, we will see that the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and the
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) kept hold of the same administrative areas
they had before. In certain respects, however, the DPP could claim victory over
the KMT.
The DPP won both in terms of the overall vote count and in how it reinforced its
strongholds. The KMT only won by 280,000 votes combined in its traditional
strongholds of Taipei City and the soon-to-be renamed Sinbei City, and a mere
31,000 votes in Greater Taichung, whereas the DPP garnered 710,000 more votes
combined in Kaohsiung and Tainan. The DPP, then, got 400,000 more votes than the
KMT.
In last year¡¦s county commissioner and mayoral elections, in which the
constituents accounted for 40 percent of Taiwan¡¦s total population, the DPP won
45.32 percent of the vote, slightly behind the KMT¡¦s 47.38 percent. However,
this time around the tables were turned, with the DPP winning 49.87 percent of
the vote to the KMT¡¦s 44.54 percent.
Even if we count things according to the KMT¡¦s logic, which involves listing all
of independent Kaohsiung County Commissioner Yang Chiu-hsing¡¦s (·¨¬î¿³) votes as
belonging to the KMT, the KMT and DPP were still equal. However, the KMT really
needs to worry if 410,000 KMT votes in Kaohisung went to Yang¡¦s camp.
President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E) is merely concerned with getting re-elected. Barely
holding on to the three constituencies the KMT already had is no reason to
celebrate. However, Ma does have reason to worry if we look at the respective
gain and loss of the total number of votes gained by the DPP and the KMT. If, in
2012, the DPP has Tsai Ing-wen (½²^¤å) or Su Tseng-chang (Ĭs©÷) running for
president, they will at least be able to keep the votes they gained this time in
Taipei and Sinbei City, and then make up the difference from other
constituencies.
If we look at the elections for city councilors in the five special municipality
elections, we can see that the DPP moved from having 28 percent of the overall
number of seats to 41.4 percent, tying it with the KMT, with both sides walking
away with 130 seats. This result will be an important indicator for future
changes in terms of which political party rules which regions.
In terms of the quality of the elections and the way each side went about
running their campaigns, the DPP completely transformed its strategy. It focused
on what it had achieved, its policies and its abilities. The KMT, on the other
hand, was unable to show any substantial achievements it had made while being in
power. It focused instead on smear tactics, on using negative campaign flyers
and false information to discredit or smear their opponents. Neither was it
above manipulating the judiciary in attempts to influence the elections.
Although the DPP is often dismissed as being low-class and negative, this time
it led Taiwan¡¦s democracy and elections to a much more sound and healthy state.
The KMT on the other hand, acted in a chaotic and undignified manner. As leaders
of the ruling party, Ma and Premier Wu Den-yih (§d´°¸q) had nothing bad to say
about their own candidates whatsoever, but they did not hesitate in using their
special skills to deride and attack their opponents. Tainan¡¦s Kuo Tien-tsai
(³¢²K°]) donned KMT ¡§battle garb¡¨ and went around kneeling before people to coerce
them into voting, shedding all self-respect.
Ma views the five special municipality elections as a warm-up and benchmark for
the 2012 presidential election. If the KMT¡¦s election performance is any
indication, even if Ma¡¦s commanders are still around, he has already lost many
of his soldiers.
James Wang is a media commentator.
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