Sunday, May 13, 2007

Su Resigns, Government launches Stolen Assets Website

Premier Su Tseng-chang resigned yesterday in a surprise move. The BBC has the news:
At a press conference in Taipei, Mr Su said his resignation had already been accepted by the president.

"To allow the president to strategise in the new environment, I am willing to co-operate and release myself and I have told this to the president and he has approved," he said.

"Although I have given up my duties, I have not given up on Taiwan."

Mr Su's decision to resign followed his failure to win the first round of the DPP's primary for the presidential election in March 2008.

Mr Hsieh surprised many by taking an 11 point lead over Mr Su, who many thought would be the front runner.

A second round had been planned, but Mr Su and the other two candidates announced they would step aside and support Mr Hsieh.

Mr Su reiterated that he accepted the result of the primary, despite accusations of corruption, smear tactics and party bias.

Su was a widely liked and relatively successful premier in a position that has long been a revolving door, opened whenever some scandal slaps the government. It is to his credit that he retained the post for long enough to make a mark, yet resigned without any scandal touching him.

An oddity of the BBC report, also repeated by the Taipei Times, is portraying Su as the front-runner in the DPP party primary. I talked about this with many people, and it was widely held that Hsieh was going to smoke Su, as he actually did. I did not meet a single person who thought that Su would win. Perhaps things were different up in Taipei.....

Why did Su resign? Time will tell. Perhaps to become Frank Hsieh's running mate in the 2008 election, although Hsieh is often said to prefer Yeh Chu-lan. Hsieh-Su would be a powerful pairing, however.

One of Su's last act was to unveil a government website aimed at documenting how the KMT looted Taiwan during its years of authoritarian rule. The BBC also has the call:

Taiwan's prime minister has unveiled a website giving information about what the government says are assets stolen by the opposition Kuomintang (KMT).

The government claims the KMT amassed these assets when it governed Taiwan for more than five decades.

The KMT, it says, has land and property assets worth at least $1.4bn (£0.69bn) that should be returned to the nation.

Su Tseng-chang said the website would help public understanding of government efforts to recover the assets.

The website details land, property and investment companies and also lists subsidies that the KMT - now the main opposition party - allegedly gave to its business operations and organisations.

President Chen said he would announce a successor for the popular and competent Su on Saturday.

UPDATE: Chang Chun-hsiung is the new premier, according to Ralph Jennings of Reuters. A "political analyst" said:

The presidential office's image will suffer because of the frequency of premier changes, political analysts say.

"If my assessment is accurate, people will think Chen Shui-bian has failed as president and the Democratic Progressive Party has failed as a government," said George Tsai, a political analyst at National Cheng Chi University in Taiwan. "The new premier cannot make any substantial achievements."


Sure. Everyone knows that the premier position is a revolving door. Lee Teng-hui had five different premiers, Chen has had six (five different people).

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Why do I feel something big is going to happen soon? Btw, I can't believe Hsieh talk about how to "perserve Taiwanese way of life" during the rally of 基隆市長 election. Does he think he is Bush (Is that a good thing or a bad one)? Oh wait DPP lost, not even 2nd place, that remains me of our own election just last year.

Tim Maddog said...

Did you catch this remarkable bit of "journalism" in the first BBC article?:
- - -
Widely known as the "light bulb", in reference to his bald head, Mr Su is a former human rights lawyer and co-founder of the DPP.
- - -

Gee, I wonder why that has no byline.

As to why Su resigned, I'm guessing it has to do with the resounding defeat of the (ex-)"New Tide" (新潮流) candidates (remember them?) in the legislative primary.

Tim Maddog

Anonymous said...

No where can I find the address of the website mentioned in this article? We would love to see the list of stolen assets.

channing said...

AFP in Taipei wrote of Su: "Eloquent, vibrant and aggressive"

This reminds me of your posts on news sites describing Ma as "charming" and "handsome"

Anonymous said...

>>No where can I find the address
>>of the website mentioned in this
>>article? We would love to see the
>>list of stolen assets

Here you go


As for the "New Tide" faction(widely considered to be pro-China), I heard such rumors about Su resigned to cut loose of his connection with this faction.

Anonymous said...

Ouch, the html code got messed up
The site's URL is:

http://igpa.nat.gov.tw/