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Past Event

CNAPS Forum

Taiwan's Domestic Politics: Protests, Elections, and Implications

Taiwan, Asia


Event Summary

Amid the protests and partisan political fighting in Taiwan, the two main political camps continue to seek short-term advantage for the upcoming Taipei and Kaohsiung mayoral elections on December 9. Deep-seated disagreement over national identity, political reform, the economy, and relations with China continue to motivate these political battles, and compromise appears unlikely.

Event Information

When

Tuesday, November 07, 2006
9:30 AM to 12:15 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On November 7, the Brookings Institution's Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies (CNAPS) hosted a discussion with leading experts who will examine Taiwan's political conflict and its implications for the upcoming mayoral elections and cross-strait relations. The event was moderated by CNAPS Director Richard Bush, and featured discussions by leading experts on Taiwan's domestic politics and international relations.

Transcript

RICHARD BUSH: Today's topic is "Taiwan's Domestic Politics: Protests, Elections, and Implications." We could have inserted the word, "Indictments." We, of course, didn't know when we scheduled this program that on Friday last week, the prosecutor would issue an indictment against Taiwan's First Lady and suggest that he could have issued an indictment against President Chen Shui-bian if President Chen were not immune from prosecution. But that only makes our session today more exciting.

We are pleased to have so many good panelists today to talk about these events. I hope that we can address both the recent events but also the broad context because the broad context really is important. We see political combat taking place in Taiwan on a variety of fronts, not only corruption and the effort to address it, but also elections fought between the Pan-Blue and the Pan-Green, and there will be an election next month for the Taipei and Kaohsiung mayor, and we will be addressing that in our second panel. There is a pressure to remove President Chen through recall efforts in the Legislative Yuan. There have been demonstrations since September in the streets of Taipei and elsewhere, and there have been defensive efforts on the part of Chen Shui-bian and the DPP.

We will have two panels this morning. The first is to look at the broader political situation. The second one will look at the elections per se.

Participants

Panel One: The State of Taiwan Politics

David Brown

Associate Director, Asian Studies Program, SAIS, Johns Hopkins University

Erich Shih

Washington Bureau Chief, TVBS Network - Taiwan

Nadia Tsao

Washington Correspondent, Liberty Times

Vincent Wei-cheng Wang

Associate Professor, University of Richmond

Panel Two: The Mayoral Elections & Implications for Cross-Strait Relations

John Fuh-sheng Hsieh

Professor, Department of Political Science, University of South Carolina

John Tkacik

Senior Research Fellow, Asian Studies Center, The Heritage Foundation

Liu Fu-Kuo

Visiting Fellow, CNAPS, The Brookings Institution

Wu Xinbo (invited)

Jennings Randolph Fellow, United States Institute of Peace


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