2012 Taiwanese presidential election explained

Country:Taiwan
Type:presidential
Previous Election:2008 Taiwanese presidential election
Previous Year:2008
Election Date:14 January 2012
Next Election:2016 Taiwanese presidential election
Next Year:2016
Registered:18,086,455
Turnout:74.38% (1.95)
Opinion Polls:Opinion polling for the 2012 Taiwanese presidential election
Image1:Ma Ying-jeou election infobox.jpg
Nominee1:Ma Ying-jeou
Party1:Kuomintang
Running Mate1:Wu Den-yih
Popular Vote1:6,891,139
Percentage1:51.60%
Nominee2:Tsai Ing-wen
Party2:Democratic Progressive Party
Running Mate2:Su Jia-chyuan
Popular Vote2:6,093,578
Percentage2:45.63%
President
Before Election:Ma Ying-jeou
Before Party:Kuomintang
After Election:Ma Ying-jeou
After Party:Kuomintang

Presidential elections were held in Taiwan on 14 January 2012.[1] [2] The election was held concurrently with legislative elections. It was the fifth direct election for the President of the Republic of China. Prior to 1996, the President was elected by the ROC's National Assembly and not directly by the people.

Incumbent Ma Ying-jeou was re-elected as President with 51.6% of the vote. DPP challenger Tsai Ing-wen resigned her post as chairperson of the DPP following her election defeat.[3]

Background

The Kuomintang (KMT or Chinese Nationalist Party) ticket won a landslide victory in 2008 over the incumbent Democratic Progressive Party, with a 2.2 million vote margin on 58% of the valid votes.[4]

The administration of Ma Ying-jeou had been friendlier in policy towards the People's Republic of China and also signed the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA), a preferential trade agreement between the governments of the PRC and the ROC.

The Democratic Progressive Party was hit hard with former president Chen Shui-bian's corruption revelations, but new chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen rebuilt the party, leading to a series of victories in legislative by-elections and local elections. One big election topic was the "1992 consensus", a term describing the declared outcome of a meeting in 1992 between the semi-official representatives of mainland China and Taiwan. The KMT agrees that this consensus should be the basis for negotiations with the PRC and supports it during the election,[5] while the DPP believes that no such consensus was reached and that as a policy it is equivalent to the One-China principle, which the DPP opposes. Instead, the DPP has advocated that a "Taiwan consensus" be produced in a democratic way, by the legislature and a referendum of the people of Taiwan.[6] [7]

Candidates

As determined by a random draw, the DPP's Tsai-Su ticket was listed first on Election Day ballots; the incumbent KMT's Ma-Wu ticket was listed second; and the People First Party (PFP)'s Soong-Lin ticket, third.[8]

Democratic Progressive Party

See main article: 2011 Democratic Progressive Party presidential primary. Incumbent chairperson Tsai Ing-wen was the DPP nominee. She was designated the party's candidate in April 2011 following a primary by opinion polls. Candidates for the DPP primary were Tsai, former premier Su Tseng-chang and former chairman Hsu Hsin-liang. Former Vice President Annette Lu Hsiu-lien announced her intention to run but withdrew. On 9 September 2012 candidate Tsai chose DPP secretary-general Su Jia-chyuan as her running mate.

Democratic Progressive nominees

2012 Democratic Progressive ticket
for Presidentfor Vice President
Vice Premier of Taiwan
(2006–2007)
Minister of the Council of Agriculture
(2006–2008)

Democratic Progressive candidates

Premier
(2006–2007)
Magistrate of
Taoyuan County

(1977–1979)
41.15% poll rating12.21% poll rating

Kuomintang

Incumbent President Ma Ying-jeou was standing for re-election.[9] There were no challengers within the party, so no primary was necessary.

Vice President Vincent Siew chose not to run for a second term, and on 19 June 2011 President Ma selected Premier Wu Den-yih as his running mate.

Ma's campaign was run by King Pu-tsung, a former party Secretary-General.

Kuomintang nominees

2012 Kuomintang ticket
for Presidentfor Vice President
President of Taiwan
(2008–2012)
Premier of Taiwan
(2009–2012)

People First Party

PFP chairman James Soong Chu-yu launched the party's first-ever presidential bid on 20 September 2011. Soong stated, however, that his candidacy was contingent on the success of a nationwide signature drive, organized by Kao Tsu-min and Yang Fu-mei.[10] [11] He vowed to run and keep his candidacy active through the election if his campaign garnered one million signatures throughout Taiwan.[12]

Soong chose National Taiwan University professor emeritus Lin Ruey-shiung, a career scientist and academic with no political experience, to be his running mate.

Soong contended that the Taiwanese people desire a third choice outside the two main parties (KMT and DPP), despite concerns that his decision may split the Pan-Blue coalition vote to hand victory to the Pan-Green candidate as may have happened in the 2000 presidential election.[13] [14]

People First nominees

2012 People First ticket
for Presidentfor Vice President
Governor of Taiwan Province
(1993–1998)
Dean of the National Taiwan
University
Medical School
(1993–1996)

Opinion polls

See main article: Opinion polling for the 2012 Taiwanese presidential election.

After initially trailing, Ma started to pick up the lead, without Soong as a candidate, after September 2011 in most opinion polls. However, Tsai benefited from the debates in the later stages.

Results

Voting took place between 8:00 and 16:00 local time at 14,806 polling stations.[15] After Ma's re-election,[16] he announced that his victory had vindicated his policies in regards to cross-strait relations.[17] Tsai conceded the election and resigned from her position as head of the DPP.[18] Turnout was reported to be over 74%.[19]

Ma Ying-jeou and Wu Den-yih were inaugurated as the President and Vice President of Taiwan respectively at the Presidential Office Building on 20 May 2012.[20]

By administrative division

SubdivisionMa Ying-jeou
Wu Den-yih
Tsai Ing-wen
Su Jia-chyuan
James Soong
Lin Ruey-shiung
InvalidTotalElectorateTurnout
Votes%Votes%Votes%
New Taipei City1,245,67353.731,007,55143.4665,2692.8215,2152,333,7083,074,84975.90%
Taipei City928,71757.87634,56539.5441,4482.589,6691,614,3992,102,66476.78%
Taichung City792,33452.16678,73644.6848,0303.169,9531,529,0532,018,15875.76%
Tainan City435,27439.80631,23257.7227,0662.488,0901,101,6621,485,04774.18%
Kaohsiung City730,46144.19883,15853.4239,4692.3910,9441,664,0322,192,00575.91%
Yilan County115,49644.89135,15652.536,6522.592,437259,741358,05972.54%
Taoyuan County639,15157.20445,30839.8532,9272.957,6101,124,9961,506,31174.69%
Hsinchu County190,79765.7689,74130.939,5993.312,176292,313384,26176.07%
Miaoli County206,20063.85107,16433.189,5972.972,600325,561436,21974.63%
Changhua County369,96850.58340,06946.4921,4032.937,367738,8071,005,71473.46%
Nantou County158,70354.63123,07742.378,7263.002,165292,671411,48271.13%
Yunlin County159,89141.67214,14155.819,6622.524,348388,042563,03468.92%
Chiayi County120,94639.04181,46358.587,3642.383,052312,825431,58872.48%
Pingtung County211,57142.93271,72255.139,5621.944,571497,426684,51772.67%
Taitung County72,82366.4733,41730.503,3133.021,019110,572178,93861.79%
Hualien County118,81570.3043,84525.946,3593.761,570170,589263,88864.64%
Penghu County22,57949.7620,71745.652,0824.5954345,92177,81759.01%
Keelung City128,29459.2979,56236.778,5333.941,414217,803302,13972.09%
Hsinchu City134,72857.4392,63239.497,2163.081,628236,204312,11875.68%
Chiayi City69,53546.2776,71151.044,0422.69973151,261205,71173.53%
Kinmen County34,67689.243,1938.229902.5531639,17583,94946.67%
Lienchiang County4,50786.614188.032795.36515,2557,98765.79%
Total6,891,13951.606,093,57845.63369,5882.7797,71113,452,01618,086,45574.38%
Source: CEC[21]

Reactions

External links

Candidate information

Notes and References

  1. Web site: :::Presidential Elections::: . Central Election Commission . 9 January 2020 . en.
  2. News: Presidential, legislative poll set tentatively for Jan. 14 . Angella Tsai and Lilian Wu . Central News Agency . 21 April 2011 . 27 April 2011.
  3. http://focustaiwan.tw/ShowNews/WebNews_Detail.aspx?Type=aALL&ID=201201140030 "Tsai steps down as DPP chair after election defeat"
  4. Web site: USCI Symposium on 2008 Taiwanese presidential election. USC US-China Institute. 7 August 2011.
  5. Web site: 黃金十年. Kuomintang. 9 January 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120101140853/http://www.taiwanbravo.tw/p/blog-page_27.html. 1 January 2012.
  6. News: 蔡:無92共識 推台灣共識. The Liberty Times. 9 January 2012. 20 October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121020202348/http://www.libertytimes.com.tw/2011/new/aug/24/today-t1.htm. dead.
  7. Web site: 【十年政綱】一、國家安全戰略. Democratic Progressive Party. 9 January 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110926081048/http://10.iing.tw/2011/08/blog-post_9219.html. 26 September 2011.
  8. Web site: Cna English News . Focustaiwan.tw . 14 January 2012.
  9. News: Ma sends KMT members to claim 2012 registration . Mo Yan-chih . Taipei Times . 8 April 2011 . 10 April 2011.
  10. News: Mo . Yan-chih . Supporters petition Soong to run . 30 August 2021 . Taipei Times . 21 August 2011.
  11. News: 楊 . 毅 . 橘亮百萬連署擁宋 新:50萬都不到 . 30 August 2021 . China Times . 21 August 2011 . zh.
  12. Web site: James Soong announces Taiwan presidential bid . Asiaone.com . 21 September 2011 . 14 January 2012.
  13. Web site: Articles - The Interpreter. lowyinterpreter.org.
  14. Web site: Asia Times Online :: China News, China Business News, Taiwan and Hong Kong News and Business . https://web.archive.org/web/20111003180837/http://atimes.com/atimes/China/MJ04Ad01.html . unfit . 3 October 2011 . Asia Times. 4 October 2011 . 14 January 2012.
  15. http://taiwantoday.tw/ct.asp?xItem=184836&ctNode=445 CEC finalizes two-in-one poll preparations
  16. Web site: 2012年總統副總統及立法委員選舉 – 選情查詢系統 . Cec.gov.tw . 14 January 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120116232952/http://www.cec.gov.tw/zh_TW/P1/n000000000000000.html . 16 January 2012.
  17. News: Taiwan's China-Friendly President Re-Elected. 14 January 2012. 14 January 2012. Associated Press. https://web.archive.org/web/20120115195527/http://www.npr.org/2012/01/14/145225784/taiwans-china-friendly-president-re-elected. 15 January 2012. dead.
  18. News: Tsai steps down as DPP chair after election defeat (update). 14 January 2012. 14 January 2012. Taipei. Sofia. Wu. Jamie. Wang. Kendra. Lin. James. Lee. Central News Agency.
  19. News: New York Times article on election . The New York Times . 14 January 2012 . 14 January 2012 . Jacobs . Andrew .
  20. Web site: May 20, 2012 - Members of the US Navy Blue Angels separate while performing. The Economic Times.
  21. Web site: 中選會選舉資料庫網站. 17 January 2020. cec.gov.tw. zh.
  22. News: Ma Wins Second Term in Taiwan Election. Michael. Forsythe. Yu-Huay. Sun. Andrew. Wong. 14 January 2012. 14 January 2012. Bloomberg News.
  23. Web site: RTHK.
  24. Web site: 404. Channel NewsAsia.