Taiwan Presidential candidate, Hung Hsiu-chu, from the KMT party and Tsai Ing-wen, Chairman of DPP, at the National Day ceremony on October 10, 2015. (AFP)
Taipei, Taiwan:
Taiwan's ruling Kuomintang (KMT) ousted its own presidential candidate today as the deeply divided party struggles for public support ahead of the vote.
With the KMT widely tipped to lose presidential elections in January and party heavyweights reluctant to stand, pro-China Hung Hsiu-chu became its unlikely candidate despite conservative views that fly in the face of public sentiment.
An initial surge of support quickly waned as concerns grew over her China policy and Beijing-sceptic Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) candidate Tsai Ing-wen raced ahead in the polls.
Desperate to avoid an embarrassing rout, KMT party representatives gathered at an emergency meeting Saturday and voted to cancel her candidacy.
Party chairman Eric Chu, expected to be endorsed as the new candidate later today, said it was time to "adjust steps and start over".
"This is a critical moment," he told the congress, warning that "comprehensive defeat" in January would give carte blanche to the DPP and endanger cross-strait relations.
Members voted overwhelmingly to ditch Hung with 812 of 891 voters saying she should go.
Hung said before the vote that she would respect the party's decision.
"The party can abandon me, but I wont give up on the party," she said in an address met with loud cheers.
Taiwan is self-ruling after splitting from mainland China in 1949 after a civil war, but Beijing still considers it part of its territory awaiting unification, by force if necessary.
The KMT is struggling to regain public support after its worst ever local election defeat last year, with its Beijing-friendly stance a major factor.
Improved relations since current president Ma Ying-jeou came to power in 2008 have seen trade deals and a tourist boom, but many voters feel benefits have not trickled down to ordinary people and there are fears over increased Chinese influence.
The KMT adheres to the "1992 consensus" a tacit agreement between the party and Beijing which acknowledges there is "one China" but allows each side their own interpretation.
Hung, however, has historically taken a pro-unification stance and espouses a peace agreement with China.
Known as "xiao-la-jiao" or "little hot pepper" for her straight-talking style, she had refused to voluntarily stand aside, forcing Saturday's vote.
Around 300 Hung supporters gathered to protest outside the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall in central Taipei where the vote took place.
"She stood up while the KMT heavyweights dared not to take on the responsibility," Keng Tsun-chieh told AFP.
"It would be nonsense to replace her. If the KMT dares to do that, we'll never vote for any KMT candidates. We'd rather let the KMT collapse."
Taiwan prosecutors said Wednesday they were investigating claims the KMT had tried to bribe her to step down, allegations denied by the party and Hung herself.
With the KMT widely tipped to lose presidential elections in January and party heavyweights reluctant to stand, pro-China Hung Hsiu-chu became its unlikely candidate despite conservative views that fly in the face of public sentiment.
An initial surge of support quickly waned as concerns grew over her China policy and Beijing-sceptic Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) candidate Tsai Ing-wen raced ahead in the polls.
Desperate to avoid an embarrassing rout, KMT party representatives gathered at an emergency meeting Saturday and voted to cancel her candidacy.
Party chairman Eric Chu, expected to be endorsed as the new candidate later today, said it was time to "adjust steps and start over".
"This is a critical moment," he told the congress, warning that "comprehensive defeat" in January would give carte blanche to the DPP and endanger cross-strait relations.
Members voted overwhelmingly to ditch Hung with 812 of 891 voters saying she should go.
Hung said before the vote that she would respect the party's decision.
"The party can abandon me, but I wont give up on the party," she said in an address met with loud cheers.
Taiwan is self-ruling after splitting from mainland China in 1949 after a civil war, but Beijing still considers it part of its territory awaiting unification, by force if necessary.
The KMT is struggling to regain public support after its worst ever local election defeat last year, with its Beijing-friendly stance a major factor.
Improved relations since current president Ma Ying-jeou came to power in 2008 have seen trade deals and a tourist boom, but many voters feel benefits have not trickled down to ordinary people and there are fears over increased Chinese influence.
The KMT adheres to the "1992 consensus" a tacit agreement between the party and Beijing which acknowledges there is "one China" but allows each side their own interpretation.
Hung, however, has historically taken a pro-unification stance and espouses a peace agreement with China.
Known as "xiao-la-jiao" or "little hot pepper" for her straight-talking style, she had refused to voluntarily stand aside, forcing Saturday's vote.
Around 300 Hung supporters gathered to protest outside the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall in central Taipei where the vote took place.
"She stood up while the KMT heavyweights dared not to take on the responsibility," Keng Tsun-chieh told AFP.
"It would be nonsense to replace her. If the KMT dares to do that, we'll never vote for any KMT candidates. We'd rather let the KMT collapse."
Taiwan prosecutors said Wednesday they were investigating claims the KMT had tried to bribe her to step down, allegations denied by the party and Hung herself.
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