You are currently browsing the tag archive for the ‘DPP’ tag.

A few hours ago, Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen arrived at her hotel in New York where she is transiting en route to a 10-day visit to treaty allies Guatemala and Belize followed by a return transit stop in Los Angeles on her way home. Three days ago, former Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou arrived in Shanghai to start an 11-day, multi-city visit focused on educational exchange and paying his respects to his ancestral home. Tsai Ing-wen’s transit stops in the U.S. are hardly unprecedented — she has made six — but comes at a time of unprecedented tension in the U.S.-China relationship. Ma Ying-jeou’s visit to the mainland is flat-out unprecedented. Since the establishment of the Peoples Republic of China in 1949, no Taiwanese former President has ever set foot there. Today, and over the next week and a half, the world will be witnessing a historic split-screen.

Image #tcpinsTM

During my time as the head of the Commercial Section at the American Institute in Taiwan from 1999 to 2002, I met quite often with both Tsai Ing-wen and Ma Ying-jeou. I have a sense of their personalities and their values. What is behind their divergent itineraries right now is of course politics. Tsai Ing-wen is the incumbent President and leader of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). Ma Ying-jeou is a former President and the elder statesman of the Kuomintang (KMT), Chiang Kai-shek’s party which fought with the Chinese Communist Party in the mainland and then fled to Taiwan in 1949.

Taiwan’s next Presidential election — in which Tsai Ing-wen is ineligible to run having served two terms — happens next February. Ma Ying-jeou’s visit to the mainland is inextricably tied up with that upcoming election. Tsai Ing-wen’s visit is not disconnected from that upcoming election but is more entangled with steadily worsening U.S.-China relations and the continuing fall-out from then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan last August.

Over the next two weeks, I will have occasion to post commentary here on what transpires during these two trips and what they portend for the coming months. Today’s Historic Split-Screen post is just to set that stage.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 11,753 other subscribers


For more information about
Assessing China /The TEA Collaborative blog, please visit us at www.teacollab.org

%d bloggers like this: