Wang’s KMT membership
revoked as per Ma request
TARNISHED IMAGE: The KMT’s disciplinary body
said it expelled Wang from the party as he had ‘damaged’ its reputation through
his alleged influence peddling
By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff reporter
Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng
yesterday apologizes to the public for the uproar that has been caused by
allegations that he meddled in the judiciary.
Photo: CNA
President Ma Ying-jeou speaks
during a press conference yesterday at the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT)
headquarters in Taipei.
Photo: Mandy Cheng / AFP
At the request of President Ma Ying-jeou
(馬英九), the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) yesterday revoked Legislative Speaker
Wang Jin-pyng’s (王金平) party membership, a move that could strip him of the
position he has occupied since 1999, the longest in the nation’s history.
If Wang, a KMT legislator-at-large, fails to reverse the decision through
appeals to the party leadership or through other judicial means, his status as a
lawmaker will be nullified and he will lose his post as speaker.
The decision was reached by a meeting of the KMT’s Central Evaluation and
Discipline Committee.
Before the meeting began, Ma delivered a harshly worded statement to the media
at 8:30am saying that the influence-peddling case in which Wang is allegedly
involved “disqualified” him from being a legislative speaker.
It was the second strongly worded statement about Wang that the president has
made since the Supreme Prosecutors’ Office Special Investigation Division (SID)
on Friday last week accused Wang of meddling in a breach of trust lawsuit on
behalf of Democratic Progressive Party caucus whip Ker Chien-ming (柯建銘) by
urging two high-ranking judicial officials to influence a prosecutor into
refraining from appealing Ker’s not-guilty verdict.
Huang Chao-yuan (黃昭元), head of the disciplinary committee, said the decision was
made after more than two hours of discussion in which it was concluded that Wang
“has seriously damaged the party’s image and reputation.”
The 15-seat committee was composed of Huang, deputy committee head John Shen
(沈榮峰) and 13 other members whose identities were not made public. Four members
were absent for various reasons.
Ma, who heads the KMT as chairman, arrived at the party’s headquarters early in
the morning and stayed in his office until the committee handed down the ruling
at about 11:30am, apparently to see if it would oblige his request that Wang be
removed from the party.
As a result, Ma’s 10:15am meeting at the Presidential Office with El Salvadoran
Parliament Speaker Sigfrido Reyes was canceled and Reyes was received by Vice
President Wu Den-yih (吳敦義) instead.
At the 8:30am press conference, Ma said he has refrained from saying that Wang
should resign on his own accord since the SID disclosed the case.
“What I had hoped was that Wang would voluntarily offer to resign as legislative
speaker and as KMT legislator-at-large to preserve some dignity for the
legislature and the KMT,” Ma said.
Now that Wang has failed to offer to resign, the responsibility to deprive him
of his office lay with the KMT, the president said.
“Doing otherwise would be tantamount to acquiescing to judicial dignity being
trampled upon,” Ma said.
He again criticized Wang for his “evasiveness” about the “fact” that he “has
engaged in influence peddling in Ker’s [case].”
The “hard facts” of Wang’s involvement are obvious, but Wang “didn’t even
apologize” for his misconduct, Ma said.
Addressing a meeting of the KMT’s Central Standing Committee in the afternoon,
the president applauded the disciplinary committee for making the “right”
decision, although it was a “painful” one.
He added that Wang had contributed significantly to the party over the years,
“but the [influence-peddling] incident was a chance for the party to wipe away
[our] past mistakes and engage in reform, which is the only way to move the
party forward and to promote party unity.”
KMT officials who declined to be named said the legislative speaker attended the
meeting for just five minutes and told the disciplinary committee that he had
neither interfered with a judicial process nor violated the party’s regulations.
After Wang left, Ma was invited to give his position on the matter, a KMT
official said, adding that the president had teared up as he talked about his
feelings on Wang’s alleged misconduct.
During the discussion, concerns were raised that the membership revocation would
be a disadvantage when soliciting votes in southern Taiwan and one attendee
questioned Wang’s loyalty to the party, a KMT official said.
A member of the disciplinary committee said he wondered why Wang had reportedly
tried to help Ker, but not other party members involved in lawsuits, like Taipei
City Councilor Lai Su-ju (賴素如), former Executive Yuan secretary-general Lin
Yi-shih (林益世) and Keelung Mayor Chang Tong-rong (張通榮).
Later yesterday, Central Election Commission Vice Chairman Liu I-chou (劉義周)
confirmed that the commission had received a message from KMT headquarters
voiding Wang’s membership in the afternoon, adding that it forwarded the notice
to the Legislative Yuan.
“We received the notice in the afternoon and have forwarded it to the
Legislative Yuan,” Liu told the Taipei Times in a telephone interview.
“The Legislative Yuan will now remove Wang as a legislator and notify us in
writing once they void his status as a legislator,” Liu said.
“Upon receiving confirmation from the Legislative Yuan, we will formally
announce the name of the person who will take over Wang’s seat,” Liu added.
Liu added that, according to the law, Wang would lose his status as a legislator
the same day his party membership is rescinded.
Additional reporting by Loa Iok-sin
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