Wednesday, June 18, 2014

TSU candidate bets Eric Chu to stand for mayor

PRIVATE HOLDINGS:Lin Chih-chia questioned the New Taipei City mayor’s alleged failure to report a shareholding in a company that his father-in-law owns
By Chris Wang  /  Staff reporter

New Taipei City Mayor Eric Chu (朱立倫) will run for re-election in the mayoral election in November because he has no other option, Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) Secretary-General Lin Chih-chia (林志嘉) — who is also the party’s candidate in the election — told a press conference yesterday.

“I would say [the possibility of Chu running for re-election is] 100 percent. It’s my assessment though — you don’t have to believe me, but time will tell,” Lin said, adding that he had full confidence that he could beat Chu by more than 100,000 votes in the election.

Chu has yet to declare whether he would be running for re-election, fueling speculation that he might decide against doing so and focus on vying for the Chinese Nationalist Party’s (KMT) nomination for the presidential race in 2016.

Lin also accused Chu of hushing up his share in a company owned by his father-in-law, Kao Yu-jen (高育仁), worth approximately NT$2 million, on his civil servant’s property declaration in 2010 when he served as vice premier.

Citing information in the annual report of Tai Tung Communication Co, Lin said Chu held 1.05 percent of the company’s shares.

The company, which the Kao family invested in in 2000, had won 160 government bids over the past 14 years, including 47 bids between 2000 and 2001, when Chu was a legislator, on 56 tenders — a 83 percent winning rate, Lin added.

“Chu should offer an explanation, as this is a potential corruption case that involves his integrity,” Lin said.

Chien Sheng-che (簡聖哲), a TSU candidate in the Taipei City council elections, said Chu could have violated the Act on Recusal of Public Servants Due to Conflicts of Interest (公務人員利益衝突迴避法), which prohibits public servants or their families from securing government bids.

According to Chien, Chu had declared the 7.89 percent shareholding of his wife, Kao Wan-ching (高婉倩), in his report in 2010, but left out his own investment in the report.

In response, Chu said yesterday morning before the TSU press conference that the allegation was groundless and was only a campaign activity to boost Lin’s profile.