| TNP calls for more 
civil disobedience
 ‘JASMINE REVOLUTION’: The party said that the 
public is fed up with government incompetence and urged the people to organize 
more protests to build a new nation
 
 By Jason Pan / Staff writer
 
 Members and supporters of the Taiwan National Party (TNP) have called for more 
street protests and civil disobedience against the ruling Chinese Nationalist 
Party (KMT) government, as they gathered for an assembly meeting in Taipei on 
Saturday.
 
 TNP leaders and advisers outlined a number of working plans and goals to 
accomplish in the coming years, including the formation of a “Taiwan National 
Congress,” which they said would be “true representatives of the people,” and 
setting up a “Taiwan Protection Squad” to maintain civil laws and order.
 
 A new set of advisers, along with an executive committee and evaluation 
committee, were also elected.
 
 At the conclusion of the assembly, Tsai Chin-lung (蔡金龍), a legal expert, was 
chosen as party chairman, taking over the post from interim TNP chairman Kao 
Chin-lang (高金郎), an independence activist and former political prisoner during 
the White Terror era.
 
 Formed in 2011 by veterans of the Taiwanese nationalist movement, TNP is a small 
party that belongs to the “deep-green” end of the political spectrum.
 
 The party’s first chairman was Huang Hua (黃華), who served four jail terms for a 
total of 23 years for his involvement in the independence movement during the 
Martial Law era.
 
 Despite being a small party, the new TNP leaders said they would break the 
current lock the DPP has on the “deep-green” voters and would field candidates 
in the “seven-in-one” elections next year.
 
 Ted Lau (劉重義), TNP’s chief adviser and a native of Greater Tainan, presented the 
party platform assessment and strategy during the assembly.
 
 Lau, a doctorate in mathematics from Ohio State University who taught at George 
Mason University in Washington, called for TNP supporters and affiliated 
activist groups to organize more civil disobedience and street protests.
 
 “The time is ripe for an Arab Spring-style ‘Jasmine Revolution’ in this 
country,” he said. “Taiwanese are fed up with the incompetence of President Ma 
Ying-jeou (馬英九) and the corruption of KMT. The government has badly handled the 
economy, as business elites conspire together with bureaucrats to steal from the 
poor to line their own pockets.”
 
 Lau said that public levels of dissatisfaction and anger had kept rising, 
leading to several large-scale protests in recent months that saw the joining of 
forces through social media of students, young people, the middle class, farmers 
and labor groups to form a movement of massive civil disobedience.
 
 The mathematics professor called this the “Taiwan Nationalist Movement 2.0” for 
the Internet era, as the previous “Taiwan Nationalist Movement 1.0” of the past 
two decades had failed.
 
 The 1.0 version failed due to the DPP going astray by abandoning its founding 
principles, abdicating the goal of Taiwanese independence and betraying its 
supporters by recognizing the political structure of the Republic of China as 
the legitimate government of the Taiwanese people, Lau said.
 
 He called on the TNP and affiliated groups to organize even larger 
demonstrations, to continue the “occupy government buildings” movement led by 
the Taiwan Rural Front and other organizations, which culminated with a mass 
sit-in on the grounds of the Ministry of the Interior on Aug. 18 and Aug. 19.
 
 “We should aim for a turnout of at least 20,000 people. If we can get this 
number of people to join in and keep up civil disobedience for one week, or two 
weeks, then we can paralyze this government. It will be a ‘people’s revolution,’ 
a popular uprising to overthrow the KMT government, then we can establish a new 
nation that can be true representatives of the wishes and aspirations of the 
Taiwanese people,” Lau said.
 
 “Taiwanese should take lessons from the people of Ireland, and the experience of 
the Baltic states [under the Soviet Union], to learn how they won independence 
by standing up against their colonial rulers, and how they organized their 
revolutionary actions and nation-building process,” he said.
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