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Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party candidate Tsai Ing-wen, is expected to overwhelm her rival Kuo Tai-ling. Photo: AFP

Taiwan’s major opposition votes to elect new leader

Members of Taiwan’s major opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) were on Sunday electing a new leader in the run-up to the 2016 presidential polls.

Members of Taiwan’s major opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) were on Sunday electing a new leader in the run-up to the 2016 presidential polls.

Members started voting islandwide from 8am, with polling stations due to close at 4pm. The China-sceptic DPP has more than 140,000 eligible members.

Tsai Ing-wen, who resigned as DPP leader in 2012 after losing the presidential election to the Kuomintang’s Ma Ying-jeou, is expected to overwhelm her rival Kuo Tai-lin.

The new leader’s first test will be the November mayoral elections in Taipei and five other cities which make up 60 per cent of the island’s eligible voters.

Tsai, who became Taiwan’s first female presidential candidate in the 2012 vote, is seen one of the few potential DPP heavyweights in the 2016 presidential contest.

Voters who re-elected Ma in January 2012 endorsed the Beijing-friendly policies he has pursued since he took office in 2008.

Since then, leading DPP members have debated whether their party should adjust its wary policy towards China given its fast-expanding regional and global influence.

Tensions between Taiwan and China grew in the eight years to 2008 under then-president Chen Shui-bian of the DPP.

They have eased markedly since then.

China and Taiwan have been ruled separately since the end of a civil war in 1949.

But despite growing trade and investment ties, Beijing still sees the island as part of its territory awaiting eventual reunification - by force if necessary.

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