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'Lame duck' Ma Ying-jeou's likely exit 'to set off KMT power struggle'

Party chairman expected to resign tomorrow, creating a political vacuum in ruling KMT

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Premier Jiang Yi-huah (right) sign the order on the cabinet's resignation in Taipei. Photo: EPA

Taiwan's Kuomintang is expected to plunge into intense infighting with yesterday's mass cabinet exits and the likely resignation of its chairman, Ma Ying-jeou.

Premier Dr Jiang Yi-huah and 81 members of his cabinet resigned in the aftermath of the KMT's disastrous showing in the weekend's local polls. The cabinet members will stay on until another premier is sworn in and picks a new team.

Wu Den-yih
Wu Den-yih
Ma will remain the island's president but party officials said he would step down as KMT leader tomorrow to take full responsibility for the party's worst electoral setback since coming to power in 1949.

The office of Vice-President Wu Den-yih said Wu also resigned as the party's first vice-chairman, a move observers said could spare him from becoming a direct target of party strife.

"The [resignation] could also temporarily ease the expected fierce infighting because Wu, who is one of the KMT hopefuls for the 2016 presidential election, would not be directly involved in the fight," said George Tsai Wei, a political science professor at Chinese Culture University in Taipei.

Wu is expected to be acting chairman before a new leader is elected within three months.

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