Thursday, August 04, 2011

Tsai’s campaign to focus on social ills

GREEN CONCERNS:Tsai Ing-wen said Taiwanese society was calling upon the DPP again and it had always prided itself as being the party that ‘stands by the people’

By Chris Wang / Staff reporter

Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) officials were in an exuberant mood at the party’s first national campaign meeting yesterday as Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) said social issues, in particular income inequality, would be the central pitch of her presidential campaign.

“Today, Taiwanese society is calling on us again,” Tsai told hundreds of campaign officials at the meeting, saying that not only have the underprivileged suffered under President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) administration in the past three-and-a-half years, but the middle class has also been plagued by stagnant wages, high unemployment and poor industrial competitiveness.

In a nutshell, she said, most people are under the threat of poverty and income inequality.
She proposed tax reforms that would make capital gains tax — rather than income tax — the major source of government revenue. The first step would be reforms to the real-estate transaction tax to stop property speculation, she said.

The DPP would also make good governance a central issue of the campaign, which Tsai said would be crucial to sustaining Taiwan’s democratic way of life, maintaining social justice and creating a sustainable environment.

The DPP always prides itself as being the party that “stands by the people,” she said, and despite the setbacks of the past few years, that spirit has never changed.

While the absence of former vice president Annette Lu (呂秀蓮), who is abroad, and DPP caucus whip Ker Chien-ming (柯建銘) raised some eyebrows, DPP officials looked confident after a two-hour discussion of the details of the campaign, from strategy to the division of labor.

They were briefed on a national opinion poll that showed that Tsai is leading Ma by a slim margin and the DPP gaining ground in northern and central Taiwan, which have traditionally been Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) strongholds.

The DPP was satisfied with the progress and tempo of the campaign, said Lin Hsi-yao (林錫耀), a senior aide in Tsai’s office who is in charge of campaign operations.

The major task before the party’s national campaign headquarters is set up in Banciao (板橋), New Taipei City (新北市), in October will be grassroots-level organizational work in civic organizations, the private sector and religious groups, Lin said.

The campaign office will unveil its second campaign slogan, following the “Taiwan NEXT” slogan, very soon and it will highlight the poverty issue, he said.

Tsai shared the podium with former premiers Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌), Frank Hsieh (謝長廷) and Yu Shyi-kun, all of whom are expected to play important roles in the campaign, as well as other prominent party members.

As campaign chairman — more a symbolic position than a functional one — Su would be able to help Tsai a great deal by simply voicing his support, Lin said.

Hsieh will be in charge of mobilization and Internet campaigning, while Yu will be the campaign’s finance officer, he said.