Chung Shao-ho | |
Native Name Lang: | zh-tw |
Honorific-Suffix: | MLY |
Order: | Member of the Legislative Yuan |
Term Start: | 1 February 1999 |
Term End: | 31 January 2012 |
Successor: | Chiu Yi-ying |
Birth Date: | 1956 1, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Kaohsiung County, Taiwan |
Nationality: | Republic of China |
Alma Mater: | Chinese Culture University National Sun Yat-sen University |
Occupation: | politician |
Chung Shao-ho (; born 11 January 1956) is a Taiwanese politician who served in the Legislative Yuan from 1999 to 2012.
Born in 1956, Chung attended Chinese Culture University and National Sun Yat-sen University (NSYSU).[1]
Chung served five consecutive terms in the legislature from 1999 to 2012, representing Kaohsiung County.[2] [3] From 2000 to 2007, Chung was a member of the People First Party.[4] [5] In 2001 he was named the PFP candidate for the Kaohsiung County magistracy.[6] Chung then withdrew and retained his legislative seat in a reelection bid after allegations of vote-buying were heard by the Kaohsiung District Court.[7] [8] In 2005, Chung again declared his candidacy for the Kaohsiung magistracy, representing the People First Party.[9] In the 2012 legislative elections, while running as a Kuomintang candidate,[10] Chung was investigated for electoral fraud and indicted on charges of bribery.[11] [12] [13]
In 2000, Beijing applied for the 2008 Olympic Games, and, before confirmation of the bid, proposed that Taipei help plan the event, a move Chung supported.[14] He was involved in two fights on the floor of the Legislative Yuan in November 2003.[15] [16] In his second legislative term, Chung led the People First Party caucus.[17] [18] He supported a referendum law that barred the consideration of Taiwanese sovereignty.[19] The Referendum Act was passed in December 2003, and the first question put to referendum in March 2004 regarded the state of cross-strait relations.
He rejected a blanket ban on indoor public smoking discussed in November 2006, as he believed such a regulation would harm businesses.[20] In March 2008, Chung was named a co-convenor of the Sanitation, Environment, Social Welfare and Labor Committee alongside Hsu Shao-ping.[21] Chung supported amendments to the Labor Standards Act proposed in April, raising the mandatory retirement age to 65, but also said early retirement could still remain an option for some.[22] Later that month, Chung threatened to sue Citizen Congress Watch for handing him a bad review.[23] He opposed the Executive Yuan's amendment to the Local Government Act in December 2009, which sought to cut down on the number of elected officials in special municipalities.[24] In October 2010, when China proposed military talks with Taiwan, Chung argued for moving Republic of China Armed Forces personnel away from Kinmen and Matsu as a show of goodwill.[25] He was active in legislative discussions about agriculture. Chung supported an increased agricultural subsidy of NT$10,000, over an Executive Yuan-backed NT$316.[26] [27] [28] Chung opposed economic limits on eligibility for the subsidy, and the Executive Yuan sought to determine that status based on income or real estate value.[29] The agricultural pension amendment was passed eventually, and excluded the value of residential homes in granting subsidies worth NT$7,000.[30]
2008 Kaohsiung 1 Legislative Yuan Electoral result | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
width=35 | Order | width=55 | Candidate | width=150 | Party | width=75 | Votes | width=75 | Percentage | width=49 | Elected |
1 | Chung Shao-ho | Kuomintang | 72,309 | 53.55% | |||||||
2 | Chiang Chia-sheng | Civil Party | 1,025 | 0.76% | |||||||
3 | Yen Wen-chang | Democratic Progressive Party | 61,679 | 45.68% | |||||||
Eligible voters | 222,141 | ||||||||||
Votes | 137,242 | ||||||||||
Valid | 135,013 | ||||||||||
Invalid | 2,229 | ||||||||||
Turnout | 61.78% |
2012 Kaohsiung 1 Legislative Yuan Electoral result | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
width=35 | Order | width=55 | Candidate | width=150 | Party | width=75 | Votes | width=75 | Percentage | width=49 | Elected |
1 | Chiu Yi-ying | Democratic Progressive Party | 89,913 | 54.32% | |||||||
2 | Chung Shao-he | Kuomintang | 75,627 | 45.68% | |||||||
Eligible voters | 223,797 | ||||||||||
Votes | 167,791 | ||||||||||
Valid | 165,540 | ||||||||||
Invalid | 2,251 | ||||||||||
Turnout | 74.97% |
His uncle David Chung has served as the People First Party's secretary general and was the Vice President of the Legislative Yuan from 2005 to 2008.[31]