|
|
|
 |
| AsiaViews, Edition: 48/VI/March2010 |
|
| Su says he’ll run for Taipei mayor |
Surrounded by supporters and party stalwarts, former premier Su Tseng-chang of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) yesterday officially declared his intention to run in the year-end election for Taipei City mayor.
“If Taipei City residents want change, the DPP has a responsibility to nominate good candidates to provide them with choices. If the party needs me, I will welcome this great challenge,” he said at Dalongdong Baoan Temple.
The announcement comes after weeks of media speculation that Su would seek the DPP’s nomination to run in either Taipei or Sinbei City — as Taipei County will be known after it is upgraded to a special municipality.
DPP officials said Su informed DPP Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen of his decision in a meeting on Tuesday at the party’s headquarters.
The 62-year-old Su, who has previously served as county commissioner in Taipei and Pingtung, is considered to be the party’s front-runner in the special municipal elections scheduled for December and the presidential election in 2012.
He promised, however, that if elected mayor, he would not consider running for president and would serve out the entire four-year term, which expires in late 2014.
“Every election to me is sacred and when I do choose to run, I will make sure I run to win. And if I win, I will make sure that I do a good job, which will require me to serve out my term and not run for president in 2012,” Su said.
Su said he would work on improving the livelihood of Taipei residents and giving them a voice in government.
“The DPP should return to its roots, return to the people ... and humbly listen to their needs,” he said.
News of the announcement was warmly welcomed in the party’s headquarters, with DPP officials saying Su could improve the party’s overall showing during the December elections.
“Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen recognizes Su’s past achievements and fully supports his bid,” DPP Spokesman Tsai Chi-chang said. “Su has always been part of the DPP overall policy for winning the year-end elections.”
Speaking after a party committee meeting yesterday, Kaohsiung County Commissioner Yang Chiu-hsing, who is seeking the party’s nomination in the soon-to-be merged Kaohsiung City and County, called Su a “strong candidate,” but added that winning Taipei City would be a tough battle.
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) lawmakers have questioned Su’s motives in running for mayor.
They have said he would only use the position as a springboard for a presidential bid in 2012.
Both President Ma Ying-jeou and his predecessor, Chen Shui-bian, served as Taipei mayors before moving on to the nation’s top post.
Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin of the KMT yesterday questioned Su’s sincerity in running for mayor, saying Su would lose both the Taipei and presidential polls if he only intended to capitalize on the sympathy generated from a loss in the capital city to run for president.
Hau, seeking to secure the party’s nomination for a re-election bid, said candidates should make a fundamental promise to finish their term, but it could be too big a promise for Su to make.
“If he intends to steal two bases, he will face a double-play,” Hau said.
Hau enumerated the achievements made during his tenure, including an urbanization project and road improvement program, adding that he also pushed internationalization, commercial development and supported the economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA).
Hau said Taiwan must sign the proposed pact with Beijing and that it would be bad for the city’s development if Su won given the DPP’s conservative cross-strait policy. Hau also asked Su to make clear his position on an ECFA.
Hau described Su as a well-matched contender and promised to do his best to engage in a “gentleman’s game.”
KMT Secretary-General King Pu-tsung said he hoped the Taipei City election would be a “benign contest” and that he believed the KMT candidate was the best.
Asked whether Su’s decision to stand would have any impact on the KMT’s nomination process, King said the election situation was changing fast and his party’s nomination process would proceed as scheduled. King said he would soon visit those interested in the elections and hoped to finalize the nomination by the end of May.
Both the KMT and the DPP have publicly announced their goal of winning at least three of the five cities being contested. Taipei and Sinbei are seen as important political battlegrounds that could swing either way.
KMT Legislator Ting Shou-chung yesterday also expressed an interest in running for Taipei mayor.
KMT spokesman Su Jun-pin said the party’s nomination would focus on elevating the competitiveness of the five special municipalities, a very different strategy from the DPP’s, which he claimed had its eye solely on winning the next election.
With the DPP’s registration deadline for nominations rapidly approaching, many potential candidates have been scrambling to get their names in to a nomination team led by DPP Secretary-General Su Jia-chyuan.
Former Taipei County commissioner You Ching said on Monday that he would be vying for the party’s nomination in Sinbei City. There is also speculation that former premiers Frank Hsieh and Yu Shyi-kun, as well as former DPP legislator Chen Chin-jun, were potential candidates in the newly upgraded city.
The party is hoping it could reach a decision on party nominees through dialogue rather than resorting to internal party polls. While the party does not have a firm timeline for deciding on its candidates for Taipei, Sinbei and Taichung, the nomination list for Tainan and Kaohsiung will be finalized before May 19, Tsai Chi-chang said.
Meanwhile, Chen Shui-bian’s office said he respected Su’s decision to run for the capital city’s top job, although the former president had hoped Su would contest Sinbei City.
His secretary, Chiang Chih-ming, said Chen Shui-bian could only give Su his blessing and concurred with Su that only when the party does not focus so much on the 2012 presidential election does it stand a better chance of winning in Taipei City. |
|
| By Vincent Y. Chao and Ko Shu-ling |
|
| Taipei Times, 04 March 2010 |
|
|