World
Taiwan’s KMT hopes for elections boost after China trip
Taipei, Taiwan – Taiwan’s most important opposition Kuomintang (KMT) has wrapped up a nine-day journey to China, together with conferences with a few of the Communist Occasion’s highest-ranking officers, amid hopes its hyperlinks with Beijing will assist enhance its possibilities in presidential elections which might be attributable to be held subsequent yr.
Referred to as the occasion with one of the best working relationship with Beijing, the KMT’s shut relationship is a sore spot amongst extra nationalist-minded voters on the self-ruled island, however it is usually a draw for the enterprise neighborhood and older voters who nonetheless really feel a powerful cultural and political affinity for China.
The journey marks the second go to in 12 months by KMT Vice Chairman Andrew Hsia, who additionally visited China in August 2022 as tensions between Beijing and self-ruled Taiwan rose to their highest in 25 years. Held days after Beijing staged navy workouts and fired missiles into the Taiwan Strait in protest at a go to by then United States Speaker of the Home Nancy Pelosi to the democratic island, Hsia’s August journey was extremely controversial.
So was this one, incomes a rebuke from Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council, the physique that oversees Taipei’s relations with Beijing. China claims the island as its personal.
Analysts say the KMT could also be banking on voter fatigue for the drama of the previous yr, which additionally noticed Beijing ship a document variety of flights into Taiwan’s Air Defence Identification Zone — an space of land and sea monitored by the navy — to intimidate Taiwan.
“The KMT, in fact, goes to leap on the probability to exhibit that they’ll cooperate with Beijing they’ll play good collectively,” stated Kharis Templeman, a analysis fellow on the US Hoover Establishment and a member of its Mission on Taiwan within the Indo-Pacific Area.
“And if in a yr [Taiwanese] elect a KMT candidate as president, cross-strait relations will enhance so much. That’s clearly what they suppose would be the simplest pitch to voters and if Beijing helps them make that pitch that’s sensible from Beijing’s perspective.”
He described the current journey as a “sensible play by Beijing” to attempt to undermine the Democratic Progressive Occasion (DPP) administration of President Tsai Ing-wen, dubbed a “separatist” by the Chinese language Communist Occasion (CCP), whereas additionally demonstrating its help for the KMT.
The KMT has accused Tsai and the DPP of being too confrontational with China, and of making an attempt to color the occasion as “pink” — a reference to the colors of the CCP.
Vary of views
Whereas KMT members maintain a variety of views — from pro-unification hardliners to moderates and those that quietly see Taiwan as de facto impartial — having the ear of Beijing could also be its greatest trump card for voters who’ve additionally been anxiously watching the Ukraine struggle unfold over the previous yr.
Beijing has pledged to convey Taiwan and China collectively by 2049, and it has not dominated out the usage of power because it overhauls its Individuals’s Liberation Military into a strong navy power. This existential menace, mixed with the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24 final yr, has made some voters nervous, whereas others could need to see life return to regular after the stress of additional issues akin to COVID-19.
“The Ukraine-Russian struggle has taught everybody a lesson: in struggle, ‘there aren’t any winners, however all are losers.’ It’s time for the management of each side throughout the Taiwan Strait to resume a deal with the bread-and-butter points going through the post-pandemic world,” stated Chih-yung Ho, deputy director common of the KMT’s tradition and communications division.
Specialists like Liu Fu-kuo, a professor and analysis fellow on the Institute of Worldwide Relations at Taiwan’s Nationwide Chengchi College, agree.
They argue that current controversies might give the KMT the sting it must win again public help.
The Taiwan Strait might see extra flare-ups this yr if Kevin McCarthy, the brand new US Speaker of the Home, makes good on a promise to go to the East Asian democracy, in keeping with Liu. Latest media stories in Taiwan additionally counsel that Tsai could also be planning to go to the US herself later this yr, breaking an unstated rule that Taiwanese presidents don’t go to American officers on US soil.
“Public opinion is on the transfer as seen within the final two native elections,” Liu instructed Al Jazeera, referring to electoral wins for the KMT in native polls in 2018 and 2022.
“The federal government has made a variety of fairly critical errors which have already shaken the help of youthful era. Final yr after the missile disaster — the Fourth Strait Disaster — the youthful era understands that if we don’t enhance issues with China, Taiwan will probably be making ready with struggle,” he stated.
Whereas in China final week, Hsia and the KMT delegation met a few of China’s highest-ranking leaders, together with Wang Huning, a member of the seven-person Politburo Standing Committee; Track Tao, the brand new head of Beijing’s Taiwan Affairs Workplace; and Yin Li, the occasion secretary of Beijing.
These are the identical officers, nevertheless, who could nicely hope to dismantle democracy in Taiwan in a lot the identical method as China has finished in Hong Kong, the place mass arrests and nationwide safety trials have worn out a era of pro-democracy leaders. Different “autonomous” areas like Tibet and Xinjiang dwell below a few of China’s harshest restrictions.
Hong Kong’s 2019 democracy motion helped ship Tsai a second — and landslide — victory in 2020 as Taiwanese voters watched with alarm occasions within the territory, the place Beijing had promised to respect Hong Kong’s freedoms for a minimum of 50 years. Dubbed “one nation, two methods,” the provide was initially meant for Taiwan as a way of returning to the “motherland”.
4 years earlier, Tsai and the DPP rode into nationwide workplace in 2016 on a wave of momentum from Taiwan’s “Sunflower Motion” that noticed college students occupy the island’s legislature in protest of a controversial KMT-touted commerce deal that may have sure Taiwan nearer to China.
Difficulty of Taiwan’s identification
Within the years since, Taiwan’s nationwide identification as someplace distinct from China has simply grown stronger.
In the meantime, the KMT’s occasion membership is ageing and infrequently seems out of contact with younger voters, who noticeably didn’t baulk when the federal government prolonged obligatory nationwide service for younger males from 4 months to at least one yr within the shadow of the Russia-Ukraine struggle.
Towards that backdrop, some doubt the KMT’s possibilities of recovering a lot political floor.
Wen-ti Sung, a political scientist within the Taiwan Research Programme on the Australian Nationwide College, says reactions to the KMT journey in Taiwan had been “lukewarm” at greatest and stated the whole occasion was eclipsed by the controversy over the alleged Chinese language spy balloon introduced down by the US.
Voters may additionally surprise concerning the KMT’s potential to get together with Washington, Taiwan’s most important safety guarantor. As US-China relations deteriorate, the US has moved nearer to Taiwan over the previous eight years and continues to approve crucial weapons gross sales.
Japan, Taiwan’s different chief ally and vastly common with Taiwanese, has additionally turn into extra publicly cautious of a militarising China and final yr doubled its defence spending in response to what it stated had been rising threats within the Asia Pacific.
“Taiwan is caught between the US and China and its safety in the end rests on each robust relations with the US coupled with cordial relations with Beijing. The ruling DPP has proven that it may construct robust relations with the US, however not China. The KMT argues it alone can do each,” Sung stated.
On this final level, they might have failed, he stated, by finishing up two journeys to China in two separate intervals of excessive stress between the US and China.
It’s also unclear if voters will probably be swayed by KMT guarantees of sentimental energy leverage.
Regardless of its choice for KMT in native elections, Taiwanese voters have up to now separated the occasion’s home energy from its worldwide picture, handing the KMT an area victory in 2018 and a full rejection on the nationwide stage in 2020.
Maybe paradoxically, the KMT’s journeys ought to give hope to voters from all of Taiwan’s political events, stated Templeman, that Beijing’s door continues to be open, nevertheless narrowly.
Regardless of the sabre rattling on each side of the Taiwan Strait, Beijing didn’t cancel direct flights to Taiwan — solely potential since 2008 — till the worldwide pandemic made it mandatory for public well being causes, notes Templeman.
And whereas it has punished Taiwan with commerce restrictions, it has stored them removed from the tech and semiconductors commerce that may cripple the island’s economic system.
“The broader level is that there’s little or no proof that [Chinese President] Xi Jinping has given up on the thought of peaceable unification. They might stretch the ‘peaceable’ a part of this as together with firing weapons and rockets, perhaps somewhat delicate coercion, however they haven’t given up on the concept they’ll get Taiwan with out a full-scale invasion throughout the Strait,” Templeman stated.
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World
Yamandu Orsi wins Uruguay’s run-off presidential election
Yamandu Orsi, the candidate for the left-wing Broad Front coalition, is projected to emerge victorious in Uruguay’s run-off election for the presidency.
He bested Alvaro Delgado of the ruling National Party to win the tightly fought race, though public opinion polls showed the two candidates in a dead heat in the lead-up to Sunday’s vote.
Orsi’s supporters took to the streets in the capital of Montevideo, as the official results started to show the former mayor and history teacher surging ahead.
Many waved the party banner: a red, blue and white striped flag with the initials FA for “Frente Amplio”, which translates to “Broad Front”.
“Joy will return for the majority,” the coalition posted on social media as Orsi approached victory. “Cheers, people of Uruguay.”
Orsi’s win restores the Broad Front to power in the small South American country, sandwiched on the Atlantic coast between Brazil and Argentina.
For 15 years, from 2005 to 2020, the Broad Front had held Uruguay’s executive office, with the presidencies of Jose Mujica and Tabare Vazquez, the latter of whom won two non-consecutive, five-year terms.
But that winning streak came to an end in the 2019 election, with the victory of current President Luis Lacalle Pou, who led a coalition of right-leaning parties.
Under Uruguay law, however, a president cannot run for consecutive terms. Lacalle Pou was therefore not a candidate in the 2024 race.
Running in his stead was Delgado, a former veterinarian and Congress member who served as a political appointee in Lacalle Pou’s government from 2020 to 2023.
Even before the official results were announced on Sunday, Delgado had conceded, acknowledging Orsi’s victory was imminent.
“Today, the Uruguayans have defined who will hold the presidency of the republic. And I want to send here, with all these actors of the coalition, a big hug and a greeting to Yamandu Orsi,” Delgado said in a speech as he clutched a large Uruguayan flag in his hand.
He called on his supporters to “respect the sovereign decisions” of the electorate, while striking a note of defiance.
“It’s one thing to lose an election, and another to be defeated. We are not defeated,” he said, pledging that his right-wing coalition was “here to stay”.
The outgoing president, Lacalle Pou, also reached out to Orsi to acknowledge the Broad Front’s victory.
“I called [Yamandu Orsi] to congratulate him as president-elect of our country and to put myself at his service and begin the transition as soon as I deem it pertinent,” Lacalle Pou wrote on social media.
Orsi had been considered the frontrunner in the lead-up to the first round of the elections.
Originally from Canelones, a coastal regional in the south of Uruguay, Orsi began his career locally as a history teacher, activist and secretary-general of the department’s government. In 2015, he successfully ran to be mayor of Canelones and won re-election in 2020.
In the 2024 presidential race, Orsi – like virtually all the candidates on the campaign trail – pledged to bolster Uruguay’s economy. He called for salary increases, particularly for low-wage workers, to grow their “purchasing power”.
He also called for greater early childhood education and employment programmes for young adults. According to a United Nations report earlier this year, nearly 25 percent of Uruguay’s children live in poverty.
But the economy was not the only issue at the forefront of voters’ minds. In a June survey from the communications firm Nomade, the largest share of respondents – 29 percent – identified “insecurity” as Uruguay’s “principal problem”.
That dwarfed the second-highest ranked topic: “Unemployment” was only picked by 15 percent of respondents.
As part of his platform, Orsi pledged to increase the police force and strengthen Uruguay’s borders, including through the installation of more security cameras.
As he campaigned, Orsi enjoyed the support of former President Mujica, a former rebel fighter who survived torture under Uruguay’s military dictatorship in the 1970s and ’80s.
Mujica remains a popular figure on Uruguay’s left, best known for his humble living arrangements that once earned him the moniker of the “world’s poorest president”.
In the first round of voting, on October 27, Orsi came out on top, with 44 percent of the vote to Delgado’s 27 percent. But his total was far short of the 50 percent he needed to win the election outright, thereby triggering a run-off.
The race got tighter from there forward. Only two candidates progressed to the run-off – Delgado and Orsi – and Delgado picked up support from voters who had backed former Colorado Party candidate Andres Ojeda, a fellow conservative who was knocked out in the first round.
Nevertheless, Orsi quickly pulled ahead after the polls closed for the run-off election on Sunday.
“The horizon is brightening,” Orsi said in his victory speech. “The country of freedom, equality and also fraternity triumphs once again.”
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