Ma has lost the
public¡¦s ¡¥heart¡¦: poll
DAMNING: Nearly 70% of people opposed an
executive order to relax a ban on ractopamine-tainted beef imports, while an
analyst forecast the KMT¡¦s demise
By Chris Wang / Staff reporter
Nearly 70 percent of respondents said President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E) ¡§has lost the
heart of the people¡¨ and that they opposed resolving the US beef dispute by
relaxing a ban on imported beef containing ractopamine residue by an executive
order, a public opinion survey found.
Results of the survey, conducted by Taiwan Thinktank on Thursday and Friday,
continued to reflect Ma¡¦s unpopularity ¡X even among pan-blue supporters ¡X shown
in a recent series of polls.
¡§The results undoubtedly show that Ma is facing a governance crisis ¡X a result
of his ¡¥democratic authoritarianism,¡¦¡¨ said Democratic Progressive Party (DPP)
Legislator Lin Chia-lung (ªL¨ÎÀs), one of four panelists at a press conference
hosted by the think tank yesterday.
The poll found that 68.4 percent of respondents opposed an executive order as
the solution to the longstanding dispute over ractopamine and 63.8 percent of
those polled disagreed with Ma¡¦s comments, in which he has said the objection to
US beef imports amounted to an act of isolationism.
Only 18 percent of respondents supported the use of an executive order to
resolve the legislative logjam over the issue.
However, public grievances with Ma¡¦s governance were clear, with 68.9 percent
saying Ma had lost the heart of the public and 57.7 percent expressing
dissatisfaction with his administration¡¦s efforts on flood relief in the wake of
torrential rains throughout the nation last week.
People were also unhappy with Ma¡¦s decision to raise fuel and electricity
prices, with 80.6 percent saying their lives were burdened by the policies and
68.2 percent saying that the prices should not be raised before thorough
investigations into scandals that recently surfaced surrounding state-run Taiwan
Power Co (¥x¹q) and CPC Corp, Taiwan (¥xÆW¤¤ªo), are completed.
Ma¡¦s poor performance appeared to have benefited the DPP, as 20.2 percent of
respondents favored the DPP¡¦s performance in the just-concluded legislative
session versus the Chinese Nationalist Party¡¦s (KMT) 12.2 percent. However, 28.4
percent voiced their disapproval of the showing by both parties.
If local elections were held throughout the nation today, 32.9 percent would
vote for the DPP with the KMT trailing at 21.6 percent, the poll found.
¡§Most people could identify with Ma¡¦s intention to take Taiwan to the promised
land and become a utopia, but they have found out that they¡¦ve been living in a
kakotopia,¡¨ political analyst Yang Hsien-hung (·¨¾Ë§») said.
¡§It was like making a right-turn signal, but the vehicle is turning left,¡¨ Yang
said of Ma¡¦s leadership, adding that the current political chaos went beyond Ma
being a lame-duck president and signaled the KMT¡¦s collapse.
Because of the substantial gap between the picture Ma had painted and reality,
Yang proposed a national conference that would gather all the opposition
parties, academics and civic groups for discussions of various policies and the
direction of the nation.
¡§Then [they] could issue an ultimatum and talk to Ma, telling him that the path
he has taken is wrong,¡¨ Yang said.
Ku Chung-hwa (ÅU©¾µØ), a professor at National Chengchi University, and Chiou
Jiunn-rong (ªô«Tºa), a professor at National Central University, both warned the
DPP against being ¡§overjoyed at Ma¡¦s dismal approval rates.¡¨
¡§Quite the contrary, the dysfunction within the Ma administration means that the
DPP can no longer perceive itself as only an opposition party and it should come
up with better policies to persuade the public that it is indeed a better party
than the KMT,¡¨ Chiou said.
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