Sean Chen (politician) explained

Sean Chen
Office1:Premier of Taiwan
President1:Ma Ying-jeou
Vicepremier1:Jiang Yi-huah
Term Start1:6 February 2012
Term End1:1 February 2013[1]
Predecessor1:Wu Den-yih
Successor1:Jiang Yi-huah
Office2:Vice Premier of Taiwan
Premier2:Wu Den-yih
Term Start2:17 May 2010
Term End2:6 February 2012
Predecessor2:Eric Chu
Successor2:Jiang Yi-huah
Office3:Minister of Consumer Protection Commission
Premier3:Wu Den-yih
Term Start3:17 May 2010
Term End3:31 December 2011
Predecessor3:Eric Chu
Successor3:Liu Chin-fang
Office4:Chairman of Financial Supervisory Commission
Term Start4:1 December 2008
Term End4:17 May 2010
Predecessor4:Gordon Chen
Successor4:Chen Yuh-chang
Deputy4:Catherine Lee
Office5:Deputy Minister of Finance
Minister5:Paul Chiu
Shea Jia-dong
Yen Ching-chang
Lee Yung-san
Term Start5:1998
Term End5:2002
Birth Date:13 October 1949
Birth Place:Taipei, Taiwan, ROC[2]
Nationality: Taiwanese
Party:KMT
Alma Mater:National Taiwan University

Chen Chun (; born 13 October 1949[3]), also known as Sean Chen in English, is a Taiwanese politician and he is also the third Premier of Taiwan of the Ma Ying-jeou government.[4]

Personal

Chen was born in Taiwan. He earned a BA degree (1971) and MA degree (1973) in law from the National Taiwan University.

Politics

FSC Chairmanship

Sean Chen's popularity grew in Taiwan when he was the Chairman of the Financial Supervisory Commission who signed three Memoranda of Understanding with his Mainland Chinese counter parties in January 2010 in the field of Banking, Insurance and Investments. This was viewed as a major milestone in furthering economic ties with the Chinese, allowing Taiwanese financial institutions access to the Mainland's vast and fast growing markets. In a discussion with Sam Radwan that appeared in an article in Bloomberg Businessweek he showed confidence that he would be able to achieve preferential treatment for Taiwan in what is considered by many foreign financial services institutions to be a market where Chinese regulators have not provided a level playing field.[5]

ROC Premiership

On 6 February 2012, Chen was appointed Premier of the Republic of China in succession to Wu Den-yih. After one year of economic challenges and considerable public criticism, he stepped down from his office on health grounds on 1 February 2013, to be replaced by the Vice Premier Jiang Yi-huah.[6]

Cross-strait relations

In March 2012, Chen gave his view on cross-strait relations at the Legislative Yuan. He agrees to the One-China policy, and that China is the Republic of China. Chinese mainland area belongs to the same country as Taiwan area, but it's just that Mainland China is not under the effective control of the ROC government.[7]

See also

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jiang to take over as Sean Chen quits . Taipei Times . 2014-06-16 . 2014-06-23.
  2. Web site: Sean Chen (陳冲)|Who's Who|WantChinaTimes.com . Wantchinatimes.com . 1949-10-13 . 2014-06-23 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121123012236/http://www.wantchinatimes.com/whoswho-cnt.aspx?id=20120131000060&cid=20 . 23 November 2012 . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: CHEN Chun (aka Sean Chen), Premier, Executive Yuan. Executive Yuan Republic of China (Taiwan) . 28 December 2012.
  4. http://focustaiwan.tw/ShowNews/WebNews_Detail.aspx?Type=aIPL&ID=201201310017 Ma officially appoints Sean Chen as new premier
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20100118101227/http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/jan2010/gb20100115_565732.htm Sean Chen's interview
  6. http://taiwantoday.tw/ct.asp?xItem=201462&ctNode=413 Premier Chen steps down on health grounds
  7. Web site: No change to cross-strait policy: Fan Chiang . Taipei Times . 2014-06-16 . 2014-06-23.