Taiwan election lost on local issues, not relations with mainland
- Voters and analysts say Saturday’s results are not an endorsement of Kuomintang pro-Beijing stance
The huge defeat of Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) in the island’s local elections on Saturday cannot be interpreted as Taiwanese endorsement of the pro-Beijing stance of its rival Kuomintang (KMT), voters and analysts said.
In the latest nine-in-one elections, Kuomintang mayoral candidates won in Taiwan’s three largest cities – New Taipei City, Taichung and Kaohsiung, which has been the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) power base for two decades.
For all the 912 local legislature seats across Taiwan, KMT gained 20 to pocket 394 seats, while DPP lost 70 seats to hold 238.
But candidates outside the two political parties won 280 seats in the local legislature, up from 221 from the last election in 2014, when the total number of seats was 903.
In the capital Taipei, Ko Wen-je – the city’s independent mayor and one of the most popular politicians in the self-ruled island – narrowly won re-election against Kuomintang opponent Ting Shou-chung.
