Taiwan’s opposition parties join forces for local elections with eye on 2028 race
Main opposition Kuomintang and smaller Taiwan People’s Party approve cooperation agreement to contest local elections in November

The elections, scheduled for November and commonly known as the “nine-in-one” elections, will determine local officials and councillors across nine categories, ranging from mayors and county magistrates to village chiefs, as well as councillors and representatives in Taiwan’s 22 administrative regions.
On Wednesday, the main opposition Kuomintang (KMT) and the smaller Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) approved a cooperation agreement for the local elections to coordinate candidate nominations.
She expressed hope that the cooperation would not only be successful during the November poll but would also lay a solid foundation for the 2028 leadership race, according to a party statement that day.
The vote, which is held every four years midway through the island’s leadership term, is widely seen as a “trial run” for the general election two years later.
However, it primarily focuses on local governance, and the implications for broader issues – such as cross-strait relations – are limited.
