TAIWAN: East Asia May Get its First Woman President

  •  taipei
  • Inter Press Service

Taiwan may become the first country in East Asia with a female head of state if opposition Democratic Progressive Party Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen wins the island country’s fifth presidential election next Jan. 14.

'Gender equality in Taiwan is fairly close to standards in Western countries, but it would undoubtedly be a breakthrough for a woman to be elected president here based on her own qualifications and efforts,' National Taiwan University professor of atmospheric science and environmentalist Hsu Kuang- jung tells IPS.

Early opinion polls in mainstream media indicate that Tsai is now running neck to neck with incumbent President and right-wing Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang or KMT) Chairman Ma Ying-jeou, 61, who was formally nominated by his party Apr. 27.

Taiwan began its transition to democratic government with the lifting in July 1987 of a four-decade old martial law decree imposed by a previous KMT authoritarian regime led by the late autocrat Chiang Kai- shek.

After narrowly defeating rival DPP contender and former premier Su Tseng-cheng in a national primary decided by opinion polls held Apr. 24-25, the 55-year-old Tsai is scheduled to be named by her party’s central executive committee as its candidate May 4.

Her path was partly paved by Annette Lu, a pioneer of Taiwan’s feminist movement and a former political prisoner under the former authoritarian KMT regime. She served as vice-president for eight years under former DPP president Chen Shui-bian from May 2000 to May 2008. Born in Taiwan’s southern Pingtung County on Aug. 31, 1956, Tsai worked for several central government agencies after earning a doctorate in law from the London School of Economics in 1984.

In the mid-1990s, Tsai became a councillor in the National Security Council under Taiwan’s first native born president Lee Teng-hui and was a key drafter of Lee’s statement in July 1999 that relations between Taiwan and China had become 'special state-to-state relations' in the wake of Taiwan’s democratisation.

Tsai served as chairwoman of the Cabinet-level Mainland Affairs Council, which handled Taiwan’s policy towards China. She was a DPP legislator and vice-premier during the previous DPP administration. Tsai took the helm of the DPP after the grassroots party suffered an electoral debacle in early 2008 as Ma won the presidency by a 58 percent landslide and the KMT won a three-fourths legislative majority.

Offering a professional image above DPP factional disputes, Tsai gradually rebuilt the opposition party’s unity, revived its reputation for competent governance and clean politics and led her party to win nine of 13 legislative by-elections and score gains in mayoral polls during the past three years.

In her first direct election test last November, Tsai turned in a stronger than expected performance but lost the race for the strongly pro-KMT New Taipei Municipality to former KMT vice-premier Eric Chu by a narrow margin. However, Tsai’s emergence as a national political leader was also due to the disappointing performance of the incumbent.

A survey of 1,001 Taiwan adults in mid-April carried out by the Global Views Survey Research Company found that less than 33 percent were satisfied with Ma’s performance while almost 57 percent were dissatisfied and that Tsai enjoys a considerably higher level of trust form the electorate.

Political analysts say that Ma’s ratings have slipped for numerous reasons, notably the failure to reach his campaign promise to boost annual average economic growth to over six percent, perceptions of erosion in Taiwan’s international status, incompetent handling of disastrous floods that hit southern Taiwan in August 2009, a decline in public participation in policy making, and a lack of transparency in cross-strait negotiations with the People’s Republic of China. Taiwan’s human rights ratings and international standing have also ebbed.

© Inter Press Service (2011) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service