Asia | Politics in Taiwan

A Tsai is just a Tsai

The election of an independence-leaning president would put Taiwan back in the international spotlight

|TAIPEI

UNDETERRED by the rain, the crowd leaps to its feet shouting “We’re going to win” in Taiwanese as their presidential candidate, Tsai Ing-wen, begins her stump speech. Some rattle piggy banks to show that their party, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), relies on, and serves, the little guy—as opposed to the ruling Kuomintang (KMT), backed by businesses and fat cats and one of the world’s richest political institutions. Taiwan’s voters go to the polls on January 16th in what is likely to prove a momentous election both for the domestic politics on the island and for its relations with the Communist government in China that claims sovereignty over it. Eight years of uneasy truce across the Taiwan Strait are coming to an end.

Since taking office in 2008, the outgoing president, Ma Ying-jeou, has engineered the deepest rapprochement between Taiwan and China ever seen, signing an unprecedented 23 pacts with the mainland, including a partial free-trade agreement. It culminated in an unprecedented meeting in November between Mr Ma and Xi Jinping, China’s president, in Singapore. But if the rapprochement under Mr Ma was a test of whether closer ties would help China’s long-term goal of peaceful unification, it failed. For the past six months Ms Tsai, whose party leans towards formal independence for Taiwan, has been miles ahead in the polls, with the support of 40-45% of voters. The KMT’s Eric Chu has 20-25% and another candidate, James Soong, a former KMT heavyweight, about 15%. Taiwanese polls can be unreliable, and many voters are undecided. But if Mr Chu were to win, it would be a shock.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline "A Tsai is just a Tsai"

Saudi Arabia: The regime’s blueprint for survival

From the January 9th 2016 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

Chinese firms are expanding in South-East Asia

This new business diaspora is younger, better-educated and ambitious

The family feud that holds the Philippines back

Squabbling between the Marcos and Duterte clans makes politics unpredictable


The Maldives is cosying up to China

A landslide election confirms the trend