Tsai rally crosses
Jhuoshuei River
By Lee Hsin-fang / Staff Reporter
Democratic Progressive Party
Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen, center, rides a bicycle with her supporters and
employees from her Yunlin County campaign office on the Hsiluo Bridge near
Provincial Highway No. 1 yesterday.
Photo: CNA
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP)
Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday called on supporters to make their
voices heard in the north as she crossed the Jhuoshuei River (濁水溪), the symbolic
dividing line between north and south Taiwan.
Yunlin County Commissioner Su Chih-fen (蘇治芬) said crossing the Jhuoshuei
symbolized that the DPP’s influence was continuing to spread northwards.
Tsai’s campaign tour moved along the No. 1 Provincial Highway yesterday,
bringing her to Citong (莿桐) and Siluo (西螺) townships on the banks of the
Jhuoshuei, where she visited temples and roadside rest areas and sampled local
dishes.
Tsai then biked to Changhua County, accompanied by party members and supporters,
chanting the slogan: “Crossing the Jhuoshuei River, fighting out the election in
central Taiwan.”
The DPP’s Central Standing Committee held its weekly meeting in Changhua County
yesterday, the seventh day of the campaign tour.
Tsai, the party’s presidential candidate, gave a briefing on her tour and said
that all staff in campaign headquarters nationwide were pumped up with enthusiam
and were even starting to make bets with each other on how many more votes the
party would win in January’s presidential election compared with the 2004
election.
The general morale is great, Tsai said.
After watching a short clip of the rally along the No. 1 Provincial Highway over
the past week, Tsai said she truly felt the passion of her supporters since the
first leg of the rally in Pingtung.
She was very moved by the amount of support and told those who said it was
essential for her to win the election that they were the ones she depended on to
make that come true, Tsai said.
Over the past seven days, Tsai has attended an average of 15 events daily,
closely tailed by the media.
Political figures are often defeated by the media, but politicians can also
trump the media, Tsai said, adding that she believed if she kept up her efforts,
“one day we can defeat whom we want to defeat.”
The rally held on Sept. 24 in Greater Taichung drew a crowd of supporters
similar in size to that at the No. 1 Provincial Highway in the past few days,
Tsai said in an interview, adding that she expected the passion of DPP
supporters would expand over the Jhuoshuei.
“I hope that in the event along the entire No. 1 Provincial Highway, people will
come and participate no matter if it is north or south of the Jhuoshuei River,”
Tsai said.
“I expect that more and more people will join us the farther north we go,” she
said.
“Party members in Pingtung told me that support would grow gradually chillier
the farther north I went,” Tsai said, adding that she had a great rally in
Greater Kaohsiung, which was perhaps even more passionate than in Pingtung.
“I expect the grand finale to be in Greater Tainan,” Tsai said, adding that she
did not expect to have another climactic rally in Chiayi.
Translated by Jake Chung, staff writer
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