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The recent fiasco of the Democratic Progressive Party-led election recall of the directly elected legislators and a mayor in ...
The US should deepen its cooperation with Taiwan on semiconductor development to counter China’s accelerating growth in the industry, the Research Institute for Democracy, Society and Emerging ...
On July 26, Taiwanese citizens went to the polls and voted on whether to recall 24 of their 113 representatives—or 21 percent ...
A historic vote in Taiwan on Saturday targeting 24 opposition Kuomintang (KMT) legislators accused of being too friendly with ...
Taiwanese voters have rejected a bid to oust about one-fifth of their lawmakers from the opposition Nationalist Party in a ...
In this week’s episode of China Insider, Miles Yu reviews the latest report from Hudson Institute’s China Center, China after ...
The failure of the recalls does not reflect a re-evaluation of cross-strait policy preferences. But it does send a clear ...
The "Great Recall" of over two dozen opposition lawmakers in Taiwan was a great disappointment for the president and his progressive supporters.
Policy Asia Taiwan's hot political summer: KMT lawmakers face wave of recall votes Campaigners aiming to oust opposition incumbents say effort is 'last line of defense' ...
An unprecedented move backed by Taiwan President Lai Ching-te to unseat more than a quarter of the island’s legislators was overwhelmingly rejected during the first of two “recall” elections.
For the Taiwan recall vote to pass, more than a quarter of eligible voters in the electoral district must vote in favor, and the total number of supporters must exceed those opposed.
An important reason why the recall vote was defeated is a testament to the Taiwanese people’s desire to maintain a thriving ...