Scandal-plagued Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian survived the island's first-ever
bid to recall a "president" yesterday after the opposition-led campaign
expectedly failed to get through the "legislature."
Ma
Ying-jeou(L), chairman of Nationalist Party and James Soong (R), chairman
of the People First Party shout for Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian to
step down during a rally the city of Changhua, roughly 150 km (90 miles)
south of Taipei, June 18, 2006.
[Reuters] |
Only 119 "lawmakers" in the 221-member "Legislative Yuan" voted for the
recall motion far short of the two-thirds majority, or 148 votes needed to pass
the motion calling for a public referendum on whether to oust Chen.
All the 88 members of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) boycotted
the vote while 12 members of the DPP ally, Taiwan Solidarity Union, and two
independents cast null ballots.
The opposition Kuomintang (KMT) and its ally People First Party (PFP)
launched the unprecedented "parliamentary" move last month when Chen's
son-in-law, Chao Chien-min, was arrested on suspicion of insider trading.
Chen's wife, Wu Shu-chen, has also been accused of illegal financial
dealings. Both claims are being investigated.
The opposition claimed Chen, whose approval rating has sunk to a record low
due to the scandals, had lost the public's confidence and should resign, with
two years left in his second term.
The Taiwan leader, however, has repeatedly refused to step down, saying the
legal system should deal with the graft allegations.
After the vote, Chen issued a statement saying "the 'president' wants to
apologize again because my personal life and family caused such great
controversy with a big social cost."
KMT Chairman Ma Ying-jeou condemned the DPP for foiling the "parliamentary"
motion aimed at ousting embattled Chen, calling the move "a victory for
corruption."
He charged that DPP "lawmakers" had chosen to "stand side by side with
corruption" during the landmark recall motion.
If the motion had passed, it would have triggered an islandwide referendum on
whether to remove Chen before his term ends in May 2008.
"Chen dared not let people decide whether he should be ousted or continue
serving," Ma said. "Although we regret the failure... we do not feel
frustrated."
PFP Chairman James Soong urged Chen to "quickly tender his resignation" as
over half of the "legislators" voted to recall him.
Soong vowed to push for a vote of no confidence against the "cabinet" led by
"premier" Su Tseng-chang, also from the DPP.
The KMT also pledged to press ahead with a signature drive, which has
gathered 1.67 million names so far from among the island's 23 million people,
urging Chen to resign.
China Daily - Agencies
(China Daily 06/28/2006 page1)