| Opposition boycotts 
Jiang’s address
 LEGISLATIVE LOGJAM: Citing the premier’s alleged 
contempt of the legislature, DPP lawmakers and others demanded that he apologize 
to the Legislative Yuan
 
 By Chris Wang and Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff reporters
 
 
 Democratic Progressive Party 
lawmakers display placards demanding that Premier Jiang Yi-huah step down during 
a protest yesterday in the legislature in Taipei.Photo: Sam Yeh, AFP
 
 
 Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng, 
center, arrives at the legislature in Taipei yesterday morning to preside over 
the first day of the new session.Photo: CNA
 
 
 A supporter of President Ma Ying-jeou 
displays a placard outside the legislature in Taipei yesterday demanding that 
Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng step down for allegedly trying to influence 
prosecutors.Photo: Sam Yeh, AFP
 
 
 Opposition lawmakers display 
placards demanding that Premier Jiang Yi-huah step down during a protest 
yesterday in the legislature in Taipei.Photo: Sam Yeh, AFP
 
 Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) 
legislators and other opposition lawmakers yesterday boycotted Premier Jiang Yi-huah’s 
(江宜樺) scheduled report to the Legislative Yuan on the opening day of its new 
session because of his refusal to apologize for comments they said showed 
contempt for the legislature.
 Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (王金平) announced the meeting adjourned 
yesterday evening after an inter-party negotiation failed to reach a consensus 
because of the uproar over the strife between Wang, Jiang and President Ma Ying-jeou 
(馬英九).
 
 During the negotiations, opposition lawmakers said Jiang should not be allowed 
to make his report without apologizing to the legislature first.
 
 The DPP also submitted four extra demands: the abolishment of the Supreme 
Prosecutors’ Office Special Investigation Division (SID), suspension of the 
Fourth Nuclear Power Plant’s construction, cancelation of the scheduled 
electricity rate hike and for Jiang to report to the legislature about alleged 
illegal wiretapping.
 
 The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus and Jiang disagreed with the demands.
 
 “Jiang deserves such treatment because he infringed on the constitutional 
mechanism by saying that Wang was ‘incompetent’ and endorsed a similar 
accusation by Ma against Wang in a press conference,” DPP caucus 
director-general Gao Jyh-peng (高志鵬) told a news conference.
 
 Gao said the DPP boycotted Jiang’s report to uphold legislative dignity and the 
constitutional principle of separation of powers, not as a sign of support for 
Wang.
 
 Wang, who Ma has accused of improper lobbying and urged to resign as speaker, 
subsequently had his KMT membership revoked, a move that would require him to 
give up his legislator-at-large seat.
 
 Many people view the incident as the Ma, who also serves as KMT chairman, 
persecuting and trying to purge Wang from the party and the legislature.
 
 Jiang got caught up in the uproar when he was quoted in an interview as saying 
that the administration “was ready to face a legislature without Wang’s 
leadership.”
 
 However, yesterday morning he denied making the comment, saying that his remarks 
had been “distorted by the media.”
 
 “It was like saying that the government would be ready for the next typhoon, 
whether one makes landing or not,” he said.
 
 With the negotiation at the legislature lasting almost the whole day, the 
plenary session fell idle. The highlight of the day appeared to be the national 
affairs forum that took place before Jiang was to deliver his report.
 
 Sixteen of the 18 lawmakers who spoke at the forum, in which each speaker had a 
two-minute time limit, were DPP legislators and four of them played a video clip 
of Ma commenting in 2006 on the corruption allegations surrounding 
then-president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁).
 
 “When you have an approval rating of 18 percent, you should have a sense of 
shame and step down even if you did not commit any crime. That is how you win 
respect,” said Ma, who was Taipei mayor at the time
 
 That comment has come back to haunt Ma over the past week, after an opinion poll 
showed his approval rating has dropped to 9.2 percent.
 
 DPP lawmakers, all of whom wore black yesterday to indicate they were mourning 
the “sabotage of the Constitution,” also held up a large banner, which read: 
“Ma-Jiang administration destroyed the Constitution. Jiang should apologize and 
resign” as Jiang was expected to deliver his report.
 
 People First Party Legislator Thomas Lee (李桐豪) said his party agreed with the 
DPP on this issue.
 
 “The Executive Yuan should not participate in political strife. Under the 
principle of legislative autonomy, Wang’s behavior should be handled by the 
legislature’s own disciplinary committee,” Lee said.
 
 Various groups protested outside the legislature, with some demanding that Ma 
and Jiang step down, while others, wearing red shirts, criticized Wang and 
praised Ma as a “corruption-buster.”
 
 Jiang’s policy address, which because of the boycott was submitted in writing to 
the legislature, made no mention of plans to put the continued construction of 
the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant in Gongliao (貢寮), New Taipei City (新北市), to a 
referendum, something the KMT had said would be one of its major policy 
initiatives this year.
 
 The 18-page report highlighted the Executive Yuan’s focal points for the new 
legislative session, which runs through the end of this year.
 
 Compared with Jiang’s last policy report to the legislature in March, when the 
proposed referendum on the power plant took up two pages, the referendum plan 
was conspicuously absent.
 
 However, Executive Yuan spokesperson Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文) said that the Executive 
Yuan’s policy to push for a referendum on the plant “remained unchanged.”
 
 With a growing majority of the population voicing dissatisfaction with the issue 
and the delay-plagued plant, Jiang’s Cabinet has been struggling to force the 
referendum proposal through the legislature since the premier broached the idea 
soon after assuming his post in February.
 
 The ongoing spat between Ma and Wang over the latter’s alleged use of improper 
influence in a legal case, which has sparked fears of a split in the KMT, 
further complicated the situation.
 
 KMT Legislator Lee Ching-hua (李慶華), who is close to Wang, recently decided to 
withdraw the referendum proposal he initiated, allegedly as a sign of 
unhappiness with Ma’s handling of Wang’s case, but Lee’s withdrawal was rejected 
by the KMT at a meeting of the legislature’s Procedure Committee.
 
 “The proposed referendum was endorsed by the KMT at a caucus meeting and Lee 
does not have the right to just withdraw it without the KMT’s approval,” KMT 
caucus whip Lin Te-fu (林德福) said.
 
 Lee said that his effort to withdraw the proposal had nothing to do with Wang, 
it was simply because the Executive Yuan would not be able to complete all the 
necessary safety tests to ensure the plant’s safe operation before a referendum 
is held.
 
 “To be honest, I am afraid that the Executive Yuan will not be able to complete 
all the necessary safety tests before June next year,” he said.
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