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The University of Chicago Press, College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University, Australian National University are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The China Journal. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions TAIWAN'SDOMESTICPOLITICSAND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS Yu-Shan across Relations the Taiwan Chen of President Strait have in March Shui-bian the major maximize in Taiwan Wu a new entered 2004. were During stage with the lead-up the re-election to the election, to themselves a lasting impact busy repositioning parties political new trends that have their votes, thus setting in motion on cross-Strait In this picture, the driving forces have been relations. in the the mass of cross-Strait Taiwan, rapid growth psychology and the island's electoral relations, factors are direct results of Taiwan's of Emergence the Triad: cycles. As will democratization be observed, all three of these in the late 1980s. Nativization Democratization, in changes economic and Cross-Strait Engagement When Taiwan was under martial law from the 1950s through orthodox the 1980s, party line: no the the ruling KMT's towards China followed policy no no and with the Communist contact, (the negotiations compromises regime was an of the Republic three nos). The cornerstone of China's foreign policy the common alliance with the US against When Communist enemy. Washington course was in the Taiwan to its 1970s, recalcitrant, changed sticking state's to compromise with its Communist anti-Communist and refusing rival. policy on The change of US mind put tremendous President pressure Chiang Ching-kuo, as he struggled to keep the derecognized island country alive. politically a was not was His to robust ultimate solution economy enough. Obviously a in the ROC's bid to win democratize the favor of the system, political The maturing of Taiwan's and the rise of the Tang-wai society an in his role also democratization but the decision, important opposition played for the decision in 1986 to lift martial main motive law was to improve Taiwan's in the position triangle.1 Washington-Beijing-Taiwan Americans. Prior re-unified archrivals: 1 to democratization, the Republic of China held as its paramount goal a China under its own rule. But the ROC government in Taipei had two on Communist the the mainland which stands for a unified regime The fact that Chiang Ching-kuo announced his intention to lift Taiwan's martial law and the ban on forming new political parties when he was interviewed by Katharine Graham, the owner was of The Washington at the American aimed Mayor Mourns Post, on audience, Katharine 7 October and Graham", 1986, not mainly Taiwan that Taiwan's democratization suggests for domestic See "Taipei consumption. Headlines, 19 www.taiwanheadlines.gov.tw. THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53, JANUARY 2005 This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions July 2001, at THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 36 China under which strives the Party's and the Taiwan dictatorship, democratic Taiwan. At for a separatist, movement independence the time of martial law in or advocating better relations with the Communists wanting were insisted on monopolizing independence suppressed. The KMT public discourse with its own policy of anti-Communism and anti - Taiwan independence any voices Taiwan, Taiwan Later, with the removal of political repression and accompanying (fangong fantaidu). moves toward democratization, the genie was out of the bottle. Ever however, in 1986 to lift martial decision law and democratize, since Chiang Ching-kuo's one to fraternize with two trends have been pulling Taiwan in different directions, the other to separate permanently from it. Both trends have roots China, decision. nativization in the democratization and engagement express Ultimately, as competing offered in Taiwan. In electoral themselves agendas by competitors and engagement nativization the triad that all, democratization, today constitute mainland defines Taiwan's politics.2 democratization The between relationship Democratization straightforward.3 and the nativization is institutional quite for space provides airing It also offers and agitating for separatist incentives for messages goals. to mobilize sub-ethnic emotions and to acquire support from specific politicians in tensions between sub-ethnic electoral Lingering identity groups competition.4 a is well established fact in Taiwan.5 the native Taiwanese and the mainlanders nativist law had been quite skillful in silencing the The KMT regime under martial dissent, Chinese recruiting nationalism decompression native political the DPP democracy 3 Taiwanese new The activists. Through into the establishment identity prominent development and democratization frustration were opportunities political rapid escalation, to advocating democracy complete of a new nation. This with elite But the population. among the for outlets pent-up provided opposition. demanding establishment 2 native the and inculcating and political anger among firmly grasped by moved from opposition outright is hardly independence surprising and the in a nascent cleavages.6 It is interesting to note that these three elements of the triad fall squarely into the research and political economy. For agenda of political institution study, political psychology to from these three and other cross-Strait relations theoretical approaches designed analyze see Yu-Shan Bao Tzong-Ho andWu (eds), Zhengbian zhong de Hang'an guanxi perspectives, lilun (Contending Theories in the Study of Cross-Strait Relations) (Taipei:Wu-nan, 1999). Alan Taiwan: Wachman, National and Identity Democratization (Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1994); andWen-chun Chen, "National Identity and Democratic Consolidation in Taiwan: A in a Divided Country", Issues & Studies, Vol. 33, Study of the Problem of Democratization No. 4 (April 1997), pp. 1-44. 4 Nai-teh Wu, "Convergence or Polarization? Ethnic Political Support in the Post Liberalization State", inChen Chung-min et al. (eds), Ethnicity in Taiwan: Social, Historical, and Cultural Perspectives (Taipei: Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, 1994), pp. 151-68. 5 Mau-kuei Chang, "Toward an Understanding Changes 6 One only after Political has to take Liberalization", a look at ibid., the other of the Sheng-chi Wen-ti in Taiwan: Focusing on pp. 95-150. "third-wave democracies" with This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ethnic cleavages, TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT Figure 1 Chinese vs. Taiwanese: Nativization RELATIONS 37 (1992-2003) 60 50 45-5- ^44.6 Both ^^50.9 42.8 \ 40 -^?39.15?ur ?39.4* " 9 ^35 MO 337 43.8 3^-43.8?43.9^42.9^ SSI-ar .-I** 40.6 36.9 -^ ^42.1 41.7 41.5 Self Identity as Taiwanese I 30 20 Self Hhi6.4 -^ No H-1-1-1?-?I-1-1-1-1-1-1 1992 Source: 1993 Election 1994 Study 1995 Center as Chinese Identity 13.5^ 13.1 response 1996 at National 1997 1998 Chengchi 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 www2.nccu.edu.tw. University, a gradual but in Taiwan was undergoing In the 1990s, the mass psychology new a towards nationalism Taiwanese national steady shift away from Chinese as in of shown the those themselves declining percentage identity, considering not Taiwanese", and a corresponding increase in the Chinese, "exclusively in the middle, number of those calling themselves Taiwanese.7 Those exclusively cum were still in the "Chinese the trend Taiwanese", However, namely, majority.8 was unmistakable. The of perception population's itself as Chinese was constantly diminishing, while Taiwanese identity was on the rise (see Figure 1). Alongside this, Taiwanese nationalism surged.9 One can attribute this to several factors: the nativization campaign led by the ROC president and KMT chairman such as Russia, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia. Here and elsewhere, ethnic tensions were tapped by political forces in their competition for supremacy in national politics. 7 Identity of the Taiwan People in the Szu-yin Ho and I-chou Liu, "The Taiwanese/Chinese 1990's", inWei-chin Lee and T. Y. Wang (eds), Sayonara to the Lee Teng-hui Era (Lanham: University Press of America, 2003), pp. 149-83. 8 or Chinese? Independence or Unification? An G. Andy Chang and T. Y. Wang, Taiwanese in Taiwan", paper presented at the Conference on the Analysis of Generational Differences 2002 Taiwan's Election and Democratization Studies, TEDS Committee, Taipei, November 2003. 9 in St?phane Corcuff Chia-lung Lin, 'The Political Formation of Taiwanese Nationalism", (ed.), Memories of the Future: National Identity Issues and the Search for a New Taiwan (Armonk:M. E. Sharpe, 2002), pp. 219-41. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 38 Lee the agitation Teng-hui, with Beijing by the opposition encounters the unpleasant DPP, crisis and so on), and the realization by the (the 1995-96 missile the West) public that the world (particularly the cause, it is undeniable entities. Whatever views Taiwan as separate consciousness is and China that a new national forming that has competed with and gradually overwhelmed the old Chinese true in southern Taiwan, is particularly identity.10 The phenomenon run where nativist feelings high. Democratization also gave rise to another trend no less prominent than the were nativism. When Taiwan and the of mainland in 1949 as a surge separated result of the Chinese civil war, cross-Strait came commercial to an activities a not is It that "mainland fever" when ensued (dalu re) abrupt stop. surprising nationalist in an indirect to resume. allowed (albeit form) was Huge saw unbounded investments in China have been made who by businesspeople an ample market and low-cost opportunities, supply of labor and resources, cross-Strait trade and weak government highly policies, pro-business across environmental trade flows the Strait safeguards. Huge enforcement of the bulk emerged, the export of producers' to the from Taiwan goods as finished a for re-export mainland to the As Taiwan's result, products. exports rose from 2 per cent of Taiwan's in 1987 to 17 per cent in mainland total exports ii was 1999 The KMT to unable this expansion of government suppress an to maintain trade helped Taiwan producers' goods exports.12 The cross-Strait of which has entailed overall trade surplus and sustained the island economy's continued growth. Both to and Taiwan the in accession WTO 2001-02, gained providing two to for the economies further this impetus dynamic integrate through institutional platform. With are being cross-Strait ties strengthened, social connections economic the mainland rebuilt and prompted developed. the two sides The need for policy to set their fundamental coordination political and cooperation differences temporarily aside and engage in the Kinmen talks of 1990 and the Koo-Wang talks of 1993. A series of surveys conducted from 1995 to 2003 showed that about a third of Taiwan's population relatives, studying, have making a "mainland such as paying visits to experience", or on there.13 The communities investments, working had both sides of the Taiwan Strait which directly interact with each other have been growing 10 11 any making exponentially, disturbance of the status Alan Wachman, "Competing Identities in Taiwan", inMurray A. Rubinstein Taiwan: 1945 to the Present (Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1994), pp. 17-80. quo Tse-Kang Leng, The Taiwan-China Connection: Taiwan Straits (Boulder: Westview, Tourist visits are excluded from Democracy and highly (ed.), The Other Taiwan's overall trade with the mainland also surged, from 2 per cent of Taiwan's in 1987 to 11 per cent in 1999. 12 13 serious Development total trade Across the 1996). the "mainland experience" as defined here. The surveys were conducted by the Election Study Center at National Chengchi University between April 1995 and December 2003. The percentage of respondents with mainland experience rose from 20.9 per cent in 1995 to 32.3 per cent in 2003. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS 39 and Taiwan.14 Academic and policy on discussions costly both to the mainland are in vogue.15 and political economic integration not has the trend nativization To date, prevented profit-seeking on 2 juxtaposes the mainland. from Chinese Figure investing businesspeople on with the and mainland trade rising Taiwanese export increasing dependency and nativization have been that cross-Strait is obvious It engagement identity. simultaneously. developing 2 Figure Taiwanese Nativization vs. Cross-Strait Engagement Self-Identify as Taiwanese 45 40 35 30 <D aG 25 <D ?cu 20 15 10 Self-Identify 5 0 as Chinese H-1-1-h H-1-1-1 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 14 Yung Wei, "From 'Multi-System Nations' to 'Linkage Communities': A New Conceptual Scheme for the Integration of Divided Nations", Issues and Studies, Vol. 33, No. 10 (October 1997), pp. 1-19. 15 Chang Yachung, Liang*an tonghe lun (On Integration across the Taiwan Strait) (Taipei: Sheng Chih, 2000); Chang Yachung, Quanqiuhua yu Hang'an tonghe (Globalization and Integration across the Taiwan Strait) (Taipei: Linking, 2003); Wu Hsin-hsing, Zhenghe lilun yu Hang'an guanxi zhi yanjiu (A Study on Integration Theory and Cross-Strait Relations) (Taipei: Wu-nan, 1995); and Kao Lang, "Cong zhenghe lilun tansuo liang'an zhenghe de tiaojian yu kunjing" (On the Conditions and Dilemmas of Cross-Strait Integration from the Perspective of Integration Theory), in Bao Tzong-Ho and Wu Yu-Shan (eds), Zhengbian zhong de liang'an guanxi lilun, pp. 41-75. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 40 THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 Let us look, however, at the possibility of this engagement "spilling over" and affecting personal identity.A set of survey data collected between 1995 and 2003 are more (see Table 1) shows that those with mainland experience an exclusively Chinese those without any mainland identity, while more an to Taiwanese identity. However, likely develop exclusively likely to claim are experience the between is overshadowed difference these two groups of respondents by a common pattern over time: an increasing of Taiwaneseness and feeling in both Chineseness slows down groups. decreasing Engagement apparently with cannot Taiwanization those mainland but among stop it. These experience, are in Table 1. trends obvious toward theMiddle Converging We in 1999-2000 a chart can use the policies of Taiwan's toward the showing political parties as seen to demonstrate mainland the trend towards nativization and engagement, votes in the various of themselves (see pursuit through parties' repositioning an as This has its axis and horizontal 3). map "identity Figure policy spectrum" an "economy-security as The axis.16 its vertical is spectrum spectrum" identity For the economy-security those who that argue spectrum, self-explanatory. will be too-close economic ties with the Taiwan's by security jeopardized themselves towards the Chinese mainland end of this spectrum. security position or that economic is for that Those who Taiwan, argue paramount development no or with the mainland economic would threat would pose security integration even strengthen Taiwan's themselves towards the economic end security, position are cautious the rapidly about spectrum. Security-conscious people a to slow ties and advise down economic economic cross-Strait policy expanding on with the mainland. the other hand, interaction Economy-conscious people, think the government should not interfere with free trade and tend to emphasize of the effects the positive of cross-Strait economic exchanges. Under the authoritarian rule of the KMT in the 1950s through the 1980s, both the official position of the and public preferences cum military security. gradually moved preferences government unification public of nativization mixed toward engagement. public preferences In the mid-1990s, both spectra; on quadrant, namely, the distribution of as a result spectra, there appeared a those favoring a and favor neither rapid unification nor rapid independence)17 are the For similar concepts and relevant arguments, see John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, "Chiefs, Staffs, Indians, and Others: How was Taiwan's mainland China Policy Made?" in Tun-jen Cheng, Chi Huang and Samuel S. G. Wu (eds), Inherited Rivalry: Conflict Across the Taiwan Straits (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1995), pp. 137-52; and John Fuh-sheng Hsieh, "Taiwan's Mainland China Policy under Lee Teng-hui", inWei-chin Lee and T. Y. Wang (eds), Sayonara to the Lee 17 of the lower-right late 1980s on, the center of both the identity (namely, those who consider themselves to be both Chinese and Taiwanese, 16 and cross-Strait distribution standard fell within From Teng-hui Those who favor Era, pp. 185-99. identify themselves as both Chinese the middle ground in the unification-independence and Taiwanese have a strong tendency to spectrum. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS S. I" 2 ^ go ft r 3 a SB ni 5? ? 3 0 n 4^ to 4^ # ^1 ? ^* U) LA lo 00 oo bo ? Lo oo <i # OO ?? ^?o ? fe to ?R * lo r^ ., LO vo 4^ S h W OO ~ iS 4x vo *> LO to <l oo 4^ N) LO vo LO ON LO O ?-* LO 4^ oo LO On U ?- b 4^ LA 4x O LO LO ON 4^ On VO LO 4^ ^4 Os o ^4 oo La 4^ LA LO 00 La 4^ 4^ O ?4 to ^4 vo 4a. LA O LO LA b 4^ Os La # 00 tO o LA ? 4^ LA LO VO 4^ LA & to to La LO VO On 4^ LA LO LO La Os b\ ;0 LO VO VO LO ?o b VO to 4^ O On Os ^4 # to LA ON S H-? Lo to VO K lo ^o 4^ H4^ 4^ ^ N) -4 4^ LO 4a. ?S oo ? VO ON 00 LO CO 00 5 ^4 ? LA vo W O tO 4^ 4^ 00 Lo VO VO 4^ vo On "^ 00 ^ LO ON VO ? O ? n 5' I' 3 CD tO Lo ? w o 4^ 4^ & ? -O, OO vo -4 ^4 to O H- *4^ # 00 On 4^ ^4 LO 00 VO This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 42 numerous most on the horizontal spectrum, as are those who place equal and cross-Strait on both national security foreign relations) importance (including economic relations as shown on the vertical spectrum. This being were concentrated at the center of the figure where preferences the case, public the two spectra from the lower-right meet. the up-leftward shift of popular preferences Perceiving to the center, the political to maximize their votes, parties, quadrant attempting themselves thus moderated their accordingly. They platforms. repositioned as president, With the inauguration of Lee Teng-hui the KMT had begun its on the unification-independence and away from unification state-to-state the of July 1999 that axis, culminating "special theory" to the "one-China the KMT's time-honored commitment undermined principle". was reasons to court One of the main that were for Lee's move the votes the center tilt toward in the same at the center. At concentrated of any economic links with the party remained highly suspicious its traditional hence keeping mainland, time, the Chinese pro-security position, as typified in the 1996 policy of "patience over haste" (jieji internal factional power struggle tilt, the KMT's intensified, in the departure of the New KMT Alliance from the party and resulting ultimately of the New Party. Led by Jaw Shao-kang the and Wang Chien-shien, the founding a and moved toward economic interests New Party position favoring rapidly yongren). With Lee's itself in the upper-right cross-Strait engagement, quadrant of Figure 3. positioning At the same fever and cross-Strait It was riding the tide of mainland engagement. on non-mainstreamers insisted the party's time, the KMT (the conservatives) stance traditional Prime Minister of unification Hau Pei-tsun cum in the party. Led by security, yet remained were the non-mainstreamers able to (1990-93), survive within theKMT until they openly challenged Lee in the 1996 presidential elections, their presenting and Hau own ticket. The in the elections Pei-tsun, spelled Lin and Hau faction.18 Gradually them closer to the New policy, bringing Yang-kang non-mainstream pro-engagement we see the old KMT under of failure in two directions, splitting leftward and the nonmainstream Lee moving Lin candidates, the political of the demise a to advocate also came with their Party's position. the mainstream faction and In sum, faction the New Party of movement for the in Figure 3. The general direction upward to the is thus up and leftward, moving closer camp on the policy map pan-blue were center of Figure 3 where votes concentrated.19 in the DPP the started as a radical movement On the pro-independence side, a new the establishment of nation while lower-left quadrant, championing loathing a in useful fundamentalist This cross-Strait mobilizing engagement. policy, though both moving set of passionately committed supporters, did not serve voters who loathed it scared away middle-of-the-road the DPP radical well generally, After changes. for the 18 The Lin-Hau ticket garnered 14.5 per cent of the popular vote, compared to the 54 per cent of Lee and Lien Chan. Both Lin and Hau lost their posts as KMT vice-chairs for breaking party discipline by running on a separate ticket. 19 The fringe Taiwan Independence Party, a staunchly pro-independence away from its origin position, as can be seen from Figure party, did not move 3. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS Figure 3 Converging Policies toward theMainland in theMid 43 to Late 1990s Economic Interests Formosa New Party Faction move "Boldly westward" identity Spectrum Unification Independence NEW DPP base, "Strengthen move westward" m o o 3 O 3 ?> O o c Nonmainstream KMT Faction, < "Strengthen base, move (/> "D (D o O slowly" Old DDP^?m Grand Reconciliation 3 New KMT Special state-to-state <-# "Patience over haste" Old KMT theory Taiwan Independence Party Security Interests This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 44 1995 parliamentary its dogmatic elections, insistence from the party on Taiwan led the party away Shih Ming-teh, and it to the independence repositioned Hsu Hsin-liang, Shih's successor, Reconciliation). stance of "boldly moving westward the (toward chair, in Figure 3 (Grand right a pro-engagement advocated (dadan xijin). This mainland)" who insisted on "strengthening a vehement Through aroused strong opposition from the fundamentalists our base and moving slowly" (qiangben jianjin). was reached at the in February debate 1998, a compromise our base, moving In westward" xijin). (qiangben mid-point?"strengthening general terms, one finds to the center. the DPP moving was the driving force politics various political parties. Ideological Electoral Taiwan's in Figure up-rightward behind 3, coming the mainland commitments and an closer of policies initial need for support from the party faithful determined the initial positions of the political as mapped to maximize in Figure need electoral 3, but a subsequent at the center the of public induced support and the concentration preferences to adjust their mainland the middle towards This is three parties ground. policy the upward move shown in the leftward moves by the New Party, by the KMT, parties and the moves upward/rightward vote-maximizing strategies will continue that public preferences economy-security The 2000 by the DPP. bring the parties to cluster towards This that suggests analysis closer together, provided the center on the identity and even spectra.20 to this convergent further testified elections pattern. presidential all in Taiwan. of the Lee's the mainland political parties policy Figure had moved the and subsequent 1999 "two-state partial backtracking theory" center on to close commitment the the KMT's (no position identity spectrum very or independence). This position was adopted by the KMT's to either unification 4 shows presidential candidate, Lien Chan, who had been handpicked by Lee as his a moderate Lien had developed Lee, however, image through stance. He led the KMT upward on our policy map his pro-engagement (Figure 4) lowered the conditions under Taiwan "ten articles" that which by proposing direct and air and trade would mail, accept the "three links" (san tong): namely, successor. Unlike across services is a far cry from shipping proposal the upper-right The same popular the Taiwan the "patience Straits, long desired by Beijing.21 over haste" policy, and places Lien This up in quadrant. is apparent with James Soong. convergent pattern Soong on the KMT who had been elected of Taiwan Province governor was a ticket, but his popularity brought him a solid political base outside the KMT. Lee had designated the then Vice President Lien Chan as the KMT's presidential 20 Yu-Shan Wu, "Taiwanese Elections and Cross-Strait Relations?Mainland Policy in Flux", Asian Survey, Vol. 39, No. 4 (July/August 1999), pp. 565-87. 21 Lien's "ten articles" called for a return to the Guideline for National been cast aside in the last years of Lee's reign. Taipei would be willing links and enter into official political dialogue geared towards unification as the mainland showed good will, notwithstanding the conditions ("peaceful solution of conflict" and "mutual respect in the international Unification that had to establish the three with Beijing as long set in the Guideline arena"). This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT Figure 4 Converging Presidential Candidates, RELATIONS 1999-2000 Economic Interests Formosa New Party t Faction "Boldlymov|e James westward" Chen White PFP Shui-bian paper Quasi-international relations q on China policy "Special between Soong relations states" m Lien Chan Ten Larticl articles Unification Independence Identity [Spectrum "Strengthen base, move the "Resolution future of Taiwan" westward" "Strengthen base, move on the m o o 3 O 3 i o o c the slowly" Old DPE New KMT -m Grand Reconciliation 3* Special "Patience Old KMT state-to-state over haste" theory Security Interests This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 45 46 THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 candidate, and Soong calculated that if he quit the KMT he had a fairly good as an independent of winning Because he was the only candidate. three birth the he was candidates, among by major presidential to accusations vulnerable Taiwan's interest. As a result, of betraying particularly careful in his critique of the "two-state he was extremely its theory", questioning chance mainlander On the rather than its content.22 formulation spectrum, identity Soong cross-Strait He also came up with characterized relations as "quasi-international". a proposal for relaxing the regulations cross-Strait governing exchanges. Soong's our on to within the sits closer the New policy map quadrant, position upper-right or accounts than Chen. This the Lien for support overwhelming Party's position for Soong among the New Party's followers. In the pro-independence in the the convergent camp, pattern was evident candidate Chen Shui-bian. One major presidential our 1998 China of policy compromise "strengthening as was not westward" that it had been endorsed by Chen, base and moving mayor an Chen had been ardent the DPP's most powerful of Taipei politician. champion his defeat in the mayoral for years. However, elections of Taiwan's independence his mind. He came to realize that the majority of 1998 changed of December to the Republic voters were not ready for an abrupt change of China's Taiwan's platform weakness of the DPP's of the DPP's order. When constitutional a major of repositioning on Resolution the Chen became the DPP on Future of the DPP's candidate in 1999, presidential was under way. The spectrum the Republic of China's recognized the identity Taiwan legitimacy, which had previously been denied by the DPP.23 It was a big step a direct sea and the center of the identity spectrum. Chen also proposed over haste" policy. to seem softer than Lee's air link, a plan designed "patience DPP the and the right of the shifted toward This pro-engagement up proposal at votes of attracted by the weight concentrated position, Figure from its previous the center. This shift toward the center of both the identity and economy-security towards with the 2000 presidential elections spectra contributed greatly to Chen's winning a distant 37 per cent, and Lien received 39 per cent of the vote. Soong garnered mainland candidates' 23 per cent All three of the presidential positions policy a a version had favored of the "two-state" theory, and all of them showed willingness 22 the constraints on cross-Strait exchanges. On 3 July 1999, Soong was interviewed by The Washington Post and expressed his support of the "three links" and political dialogue with China, and his opposition to Taiwan's "money diplomacy" and its bid to join the United Nations. Furthermore, he questioned the necessity and desirability of deploying the Theatre Missile Defense. Soong's remarks soon led to charges by Lien and Chen that the former governor of Taiwan was betraying the interests of Taiwan's 23 to relax further people. Prior to the passing of that resolution, the DPP's ostensible goal was to replace the Republic of China with an independent Republic of Taiwan, as stipulated in the party constitution. The change of tone in the Resolution was justified by claiming that Taiwan is already independent, and thus there is no need to declare independence a second time. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT a Referendum toward Racing is a There stark contrast 47 RELATIONS in 2003-04 between the race the of convergence in 2004 the independence pattern of the 2000 toward elections and elections, was same: all the the basic the parties political although logic repositioned on the mainland China policy map tomaximize their votes. themselves of cross-Strait economic On the one hand, no one could deny the importance presidential to the growth relations of Taiwan's Taiwan and 300,000 From 2000 or the political influence of the economy, on skilled workers the mainland. residing on the mainland rose from 17 dependency businesspeople to 2003, Taiwan's export to cent cent. 25 Overall also rose from 11 per cent in trade dependency per per was the destination 2000 to 17 per cent in 2003. The mainland of 54 per cent of in 2003, compared with 34 per cent in 2000. This Taiwan's investment outbound meant that a pro-engagement policy was becoming increasingly important for any to gain majority electoral party striving support. A so-called pan-blue political that was formed between the KMT and James Soong's coalition the party, People First Party, became ardent supporters of rapid engagement with the mainland, of the three links. The DPP the establishment also moved in a starting with direction, Economic pro-engagement The demanded. elections, to voters parliamentary demonstrate The "mini-three Matsu Kinmen, greater links" and cross-Strait at although Development was convened its commitment that a much slower Conference, by the DPP to liberalizing than its critics pace held prior to the 2001 in part to transactions. government cross-Strait liberalized was the mainland engagement. trade between the offshore islands of concurrence another of its with signal In sum, one finds all the major political parties, except for the staunchly pro-independence Taiwan Solidarity Union various degrees of pro-engagement policy. trend also emerged, in a different direction. espousing But another Lee nativist After (TSU), twelve years of nativization as observed three years of Chen Shui-bian's textbooks and so on), attitudes, policies (including rewriting history a in Figure have been nationalism. 1, gradual shift away from Chinese undergoing with frustration the continued international isolation Popular country's easily into the hands of the independence A recent sore point was advocates. played Taiwan's to the World Health Organization failure to gain access at the height of the SARS the fact that the PRC had the secret disease scare, exacerbated by kept for a prolonged of to thus its Taiwan. the time, Also, period precipitating spread threat that had been Taiwan's military quite applied effectively against Teng-hui's rule, plus independence by Beijing in the past had lost part of its credibility, as the threat had never mainland been officials substantiated, became more and over annoying time the repeated than feared. Even trade with Strait, clearly 24 the mainland and the accelerating proliferation increased economic with coincided integration seen in Figure 2.24 This shift in mass psychology stern warnings by with unprecedented of social ties across the as alienation, political was not clearly known It is interesting to note that, even though the national identity of Taiwan's population has undergone sea changes, explicit attitudes on unification vs independence This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions have not THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 48 was to politicians its magnitude until it was well under way. When gradually or to to it presented the political revealed, grasp the opportunities parties acted minimize damage. possible stance on cross-Strait When Chen came to power, with his much moderated to two possibilities themselves. The first was for Chen relations, presented to and for the DPP with the the continue middle way, compete pan-blue treading of In this framework the China. within constitutional the of parties Republic the DPP would scenario, finally be "tamed" by acquiring was for the DPP to use status quo. The second possibility a vested in the interest the executive of power the presidency to pursue its ultimate ideological goal of abolishing the Republic of China and replacing it with an independent Republic of Taiwan. The major as has to accomplish be a constitutional this goal would referendum, of Taiwan the been advocated supporters independence.25 long by to tone down the Chen did his very best In his statements, President to that the he hold. moderate used Following position independence pro-Taiwan mechanism line established in the Resolution on the Future of Taiwan and the DPP White that he would in his inauguration speech Paper on China Policy, Chen declared name not of the the of China, not declare would change Republic independence, not in would hold a not include the the "two-state would constitution, theory" on independence, not abrogate for National and would the Guidelines referendum so long as China did not or abolish the National Unification Unification Council, were actually a return against Taiwan. The "four nos" (si bu yi meiyou) a This of "conditional to the DPP's signified independence". position pre-1991 the political on Chen's concession party ideology with part to reconcile major was new cent less than 40 per that the realities government popular facing: an the PLA's from sabre-rattling parliament, support, opposition-dominated use force a corresponding experienced The quo. huge and Taiwanese" discrepancy the much The shift. absolute the between smaller number majority number large of those who still of are favor fully reservoir of on in popular preferences that pro-independence frustration unification/independence, can politicians the identity shift is not creates it nevertheless always status "exclusively is largely self-proclaimed for independence caused by the uncertainties associated with independence. Although reflected the maintaining tap. See "Dalu a zhengce yu liang'an guanxi: di si bo; di wu bo" (Mainland Policy and Cross-Strait Relations: Fourth Survey; Fifth Survey), Mainland Affairs Council Research Project, 1999, 2000; Chen Yih-yan and Chen Lu-huei, "Moleng liangke de taidu haishi buqueding de weilai: Taiwan minzhong tongdu guan de jiexi" (Ambiguity or Uncertainty: Preference on the Taiwan Independence Issue Among the Electorate in Taiwan), Zhongguo dalu yanjiu (Mainland China Studies) [Taiwan], Vol. 46, No. 5 (September/October 2003), pp. 1-20; and Yu-Shan Wu, "Liang'an guanxi zhong de Zhongguo yishi yu Taiwan yishi" (The Chinese/Taiwanese Identity in Cross-Strait Relations), Zhongguo shiwu (China Affairs Quarterly) [Taiwan], No. 4 (April 2001), pp. 71-89. 25 It is true that the constitutional for practical reasons: structure of the Republic of China is in dire need of reform for example, to make the president more accountable and to reduce the friction between the executive and the legislative branches when the two are not in the hands of the same political party. However, for the pro-independence activists, the purpose of a constitutional referendum is not to amend the ROC constitution, but to bring in a new and independent Republic of Taiwan. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT across by Taiwan's major all, be transformed the Taiwan Strait, and the constraints imposed after the DPP might, For a time, it seemed an movement into establishment quasi-revolutionary the US. within party, operating political of the Republic of China. as to what Chen's ultimate left everyone guessing developments on or status quo the issue of unification, be Beijing independence. might be soothed and the pan-blue camp mollified as a viable unification patron, from a framework the constitutional Subsequent decision would 49 RELATIONS and when for Taiwan, as a precursor integration option when Chen talked about he encouraged cross-Strait to political integration (zhengzhi consensus He endorsed the reached of an advisory by the members tonghe).26 of the Academia President that called for Sinica, group headed by Lee Yuan-tseh, and cultural economic to the mainland's with reference "one-China principle" which has a one-China Chen framework. However, responding Constitution, tone rapidly whenever he deemed it beneficial or as a tit-for-tat purposes strategy against to the ROC changed his to do so for domestic political the mainland's pressure. Hence, when Beijing persuaded Taiwan's tiny ally Nauru to break ties with Taipei in July 2002, at a time when by describing which guo), had just assumed of the DPP, Chen chairmanship situation as "one country on each side" the cross-Strait was to Lee's controversial semantically equivalent Chen Would on "two-state three years earlier. announced theory" responded (yi bian yi the DPP opt in the 2004 presidential campaign for a public policy as is typically the case in established issues, to do, for This was obviously what the pan-blue democracies? wanted Chen camp an had and Taiwan's the DPP crisis, economy just experienced unprecedented to be desired even left much in the minds of its performance government's debate economic and social went much farther supporters. As it turned out, the DPP's presidential campaign than public policy debate. The stakes became less than the existence of nothing the Republic of China and war and peace in the Taiwan Strait. The DPP the establishment of a new time, advocated had, at an earlier but since Chen gave the "four nos" of Taiwan through a referendum, in his in 2001 talk had become promise inauguration speech May pro-referendum rarer The developments much from DPP politicians. since the beginning of 2003, an impact on the calculations of the DPP's however, made campaign strategists. Republic On the one hand, there emerged a genuine political crisis for Chen's camp. After protracted negotiations, Lien Chan and James Soong had finally bridged their differences and formed a joint ticket in February 2003. Neither of the two stood chance any of defeating Chen if they ran separately against each other. This prospect forced Soong to approach theKMT and accept the vice presidential spot in a joint ticket with Lien. With this joining of forces, the pan-blue camp was given a badly-needed boost inmorale. Victory looked likely. The DPP obviously needed could a strategy to regain momentum. form the basis for a new campaign to Taiwan 26 independence and entail A and a new constitution but they are dangerously close referendum strategy, a great risk both domestically Chen Shui-bian, "Chen Shui-bian yuandan zhuci quanwen" (Chen Shui-bian's Year Address), at http://www.future-china.org.tw/spcl_rpt/ncn/integ.htm. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions and 2001 New THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 50 In the past, whenever the DPP ran national elections with Taiwan as a it the had serious suffered defeat.27 major platform, independence always The water was tested by the DPP's pan-green junior partner in the so-called internationally. camp, the Taiwan Solidarity Union was a master who politician, careful factional rule through led by former President Lee Teng-hui. Lee had gained supreme power in the twelve years of his and by invoking populist to pressures maneuvering dominate the KMT and the government. After the humiliating defeat of Lien Chan in the 2000 presidential elections, Lee was forced to resign from the KMT a vocal critic of the KMT and established then became the Taiwan a on extreme the end of Union, staunchly Solidarity party pro-independence a mass The Taiwan's TSU to demonstration spectrum. political organized "rectify on 6 September name" Taiwan's for independence) and it 2003, (a euphemism was estimated that some 200,000 took to the streets. By that time, Lee had people leadership. He on himself successfully repositioned of Taiwan advocate independence.28 the The as the most ardent spectrum identity success of the demonstration convinced DPP strategists that the identity issue should be swiftly brought into the campaign limelight. a schedule for put forward enthusiastically a In referendum. Lee through mid-September, to Taiwan would have that declare suggested Teng-hui independence prior to the in order not to be overwhelmed of Chinese 2008 nationalism that surge by would the 2008 Beijing Olympic Chen's Games. timetable was more accompany In the following months, a new constitution launching Chen urgent. On 28 September, Chen declared that in 2006 the DPP would celebrate the birth of a new constitution call for both a referendum for Taiwan.29 The blue and a new constitution the camp initially resisted to bring and wished the back to economic and social issues. However, the radicalization of campaign with a sharp decline of support for the Lien-Soong Chen's coincided campaign a to in and Unable redefine the campaign Chen's ticket, surge popularity. agenda, or come up with a strong defense for the pan-blue Lien was convinced position, that a radical camp from his party's line was necessary, and the pan-blue departure to face the referendum/new constitution issue directly. Lien felt the a public parties had for too long provided good for Taiwan (namely, needed pan-blue 27 In the 1991 National Assembly elections the DPP received only 22.8 per cent of the vote, and in the 1996 presidential elections, the DPP's candidate Peng Ming-min garnered a meager 21.1 per cent of the popular vote. In both cases, the DPP ran a single-issue campaign for The independence. less than normal. significantly Taiwan 28 Lee has a strong sense of votes a nativist the party mission. received However, under those circumstances were politician, having as a consummate been dislodged from the KMT, Lee realized that tomake a comeback the only possible route was to position himself as the leader of the independence movement. Lee could not assert himself in themiddle of the identity spectrum, as that is overcrowded. As the first Taiwanese to become president, Lee is uniquely endowed to be the leader of the independence movement. 29 On 11November Chen designated the date for his constitutional referendum as 10December, World Human Rights Day, in 2006 and enactment on 20 May 2008. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 51 TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS the status quo of the ROC and thus maintaining stability and peace) safeguarding as a result. The DPP for unrealizable had been and had suffered chanting on to their Utopian the bloc and counted camp pan-blue goals, independence of thwarting and the pan-blues the DPP could accuse reform, plans. This way, benefits. It was time for the pan-blue reap political him to show whether and expose Chen, forcing straw that broke the camel's The last independence. to adjust its positions he really wanted immediate warm back was Washington's alliance of President Chen when he passed and high-profile reception through on route to and from a diplomatic to Latin in America the US early trip of the Lien-Soong ticket dropping the popularity November.30 and the US Seeing welcome not its doing share in checking was Chen's with flirtation explicit that a turnabout advisors Taiwan on the urged by independence, was issue constitution In November, Lien embraced referendum/new imperative. a and he referendum the forward put holding blue-camp's "three-step plan" for to the ROC constitution. Lien's plan, Taiwan would have a amending According Lien constitutional 2006 his overhaul 2008 independence by 2005. From Lee's plan, to Chen's to Lien's 2005 constitutional all of the referendum, overhaul, a race to change current political in Taiwan the country's joined constitutional politicians system (see Figure 5). Since theROC constitutional system is intrinsically linked to cross-Strait the next five the election-driven relations, in various the years parties' constitutional would scheduled changes a bring high degree for of plans to the region. and volatility uncertainty on Lien's More radical moves In December, still to come. he part were the "two-state reasserted the that both of China and theory" by claiming Republic are move of the People's China countries. This Republic sovereign essentially embraced Chen's "one country on each side" formula, to a basic and amounted "one-China" Lien also echoed Legislative Yuan change of the KMT's principle. a remarks that is viable alternative for Speaker Wang Jin-pyng's independence on to the middle-left the decisively ground He that two there exist countries spectrum. unification-independence emphasized that face each other across the Taiwan and Strait, and that both unification are alternatives from which people in Taiwan can choose.31 independence Taiwan. 30 31 Lien had shifted Th?r?se Shaheen, theWashington-based chairwoman of theAmerican Institute in Taiwan, the de facto US embassy, revealed that President Bush is the "secret guardian angel" of Taiwan at a high-profile reception for Chen that the AIT held inNew York City during Chen's transit On a different occasion, Shaheen also stressed that the Bush administration had never said it "opposes Taiwan independence". Chinese officials said Shaheen's statement and her effusive praise of Chen emboldened Chen to pursue his independence drive. John Pomfret, "ChinaWarns Taiwan That AttackMay Be 'Unavoidable'",Washington Post, 20 November 2003, p. A28. This strategic retreatwas forced on Lien byWang and other KMT legislators from southern Taiwan where are electorates traditionally more pro-independence. Because mainlanders, Hakkas and aborigines are staunchly on the blue side, theHok-los (Minnans) who constitute 75 per cent of the population become the critical vote bloc. Hok-los are the most pro-independence among all the ethnic and sub-ethnic groups in Taiwan. It boiled down to a strategic calculation that, in order to swing theHok-lo votes, theLien-Soong ticket needed to tiltmore towards the independence end of the political spectrum. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 52 Figure 5 Racing toward Referenda, 2003-04 Economic Interests Lien & Soong a 2003-04 2005 New ?_ Constitution Chen 2003-4 2006 New SARS Constitution t Chen ] 2000 New Party Mini three links New DPP "Strengthen the "Resolution "Strengthen base, move slowly" Old DPP A on the future of Tai wan" the Grand Reconciliation 2000 Lien $ 2000 Independence base, move westward" Soong m o o 3 O 3 Unification Identity Spectrum CO (D O C/> o (D O?+ -t c New KMT 3 Old KMT Lee&TSU?^ 2003-04 2008 New Special state-to-state Constitution theory "Patience over haste" Security Interests This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions there was subsequently Although it has become of position, quite the now unwelcome "one-China" 53 RELATIONS TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT backtracking by Lien on this grand shift to be associated with that he did not want own version of even with the KMT's principle, some clear less than the very existence of the ROC and peace it.32 Nothing were to be held hostage to electoral politics on the island. Strait on the referendum/constitution his surprise turnabout With in the Taiwan issue, Lien of a referendum law that favor would that the KMT-PFP rapid passage promised on local, national to make and constitutional decisions enable people would on keeping the name of the country unchanged issues. Except for an insistence to all proposals of China), Lien was the for amending open (the Republic On the pan-blue version of the Referendum Law as It instituted Yuan. referenda instruments for through passed a lot the with of albeit constraints. national For will, people's procedural enacting one needs to gather signatures than five per from more referendum proposals, cent of the total number of voters taking part in the last presidential A elections. constitution. 27 November, the Legislative referendum deliberation commission will be set up to determine the eligibility of the referendum Commissioners proposals. on their share of seats. are to be nominated by parliamentary cannot amendments be but have to pass through the legislature with an citizens, by ordinary them in referenda. With and then the people need to confirm all absolute majority new was as a the law described these constraints, by the pan-greens. "bird-cage" an opportunity to initiate a the law does provide for the president However, parties initiated based referendum when external faces country was "defensive referendum" threats the This sovereignty.33 Constitutional that at the DPP's national endanger insistence.34 Chen rapidly declared that he would exercise his presidential prerogative to initiate a "defensive 32 was being threatened by missiles in order. 16 of the Referendum Law reads: "When the country is threatened by external forces (dan guojia zaoshou waili weixie), so that national sovereignty may be subject to change (?hi guojia zhuquan you gaibian zhi yu), the President may, through a resolution of the Executive Article Yuan, 34 the country In the second television debate between the two presidential candidates on 21 February 2004, Lien reasserted that if forced to clarify themeaning of "one China", he would insist that it is the Republic of China. However, in the same debate Lien distanced himself from the Guidelines for National Unification, suggesting that a complete overhaul of the document was 33 since referendum", submit for referendum matters national concerning security." This dates back to the DPP's 1987 Resolution of "four ifs" and Chen's 2000 inauguration speech of "four nos" in which Taiwan independence was used as a deterrent against specific contingencies. In the 1987 resolution it was stated that the DPP would advocate Taiwan's independence if the KMT conducts peace negotiations with the CCP, if the KMT betrays the interests of the Taiwanese people, if the CCP unifies Taiwan, or if the KMT fails to practice genuine constitutional democracy. Chen's 2000 inauguration speech promised that, as long as the CCP did not intend to use force against Taiwan, during his term he would not declare independence, would not change the name of the country, would not insert the "two-state theory" into the constitution, and would not initiate a referendum on the issue of neither would there be any attempt to abrogate the Guidelines for unification/independence, National Unification or to abolish theNational Unification Council. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 54 THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 deployed across the political the Taiwan to show Strait. Eager situation, Chen that he was jumped to the decision in control still to hold of a defensive he would voters to ask Taiwan's figured out what from the and from and pressure mounting opposition Washington Chen promised that his defensive would not aim at changing referendum Beijing, the status quo, but would rather strengthen it. To initiate a referendum in this referendum before decide. Under context was he had a twist of the DPP's own support. political Chen's "defensive about referendum", however, from Washington. pressure tremendous so as to shore up the president's tradition,35 more and brought provoked Beijing a referendum was Since holding came up with advisors ultimately than its content, Chen and his important two deliberately that neither Taiwan's voters nor the non-controversial questions Americans would asked: "Should mainland China oppose.36 The first question refuse to withdraw the missiles it has targeted at Taiwan and to renounce openly the use of force against us, would should acquire you agree that the Government more to strengthen advanced anti-missile Taiwan's self-defense weapons The second question was: "Would you agree that our Government capabilities?" on the establishment in negotiations with mainland should engage China of a and framework for cross-Strait interactions in order to build 'peace stability' consensus on both sides?" and for the welfare of the peoples The race 2003-04 convergence toward to a referendum contrasts the 1999-2000 starkly with the middle. If we locate all the policy positions of the major political parties in Taiwan, we get Figure 6. We find theKMT's line zigzagging to the upper-left. The (Soong) PFP's up and left, from the lower-right quadrant to the upper-left line also shifts to the left, from the upper-right The quadrant. at DPP's line takes a different the lower-left course, starting quadrant, moving the center toward 1999-2000 of the figure, presidential and shifting back campaign period to the left. Whereas all of the political the during parties had were at the center, concentrated in 2003-04 all the were candidates center the of but after presidential again chasing political gravity, scare the pan-green more the SARS much to found the camp people receptive and to a new constitution. notion of a referendum The notion of independence, a considerably as "rectification of name", better popular gained euphemized a new were constitution and independence linked but Referenda, reception. so to different that while the audiences, differently emphasized greens' votes that recognized voters also be could secured, middle-of-the-road support was the green camp. Ultimately of electoral the pressure forced politics the pan-blue to institute parties to join the chorus, and the two camps competed referenda and rewrite the constitution. fundamentalist lured 35 36 toward See Ralph A. Cossa, "Taiwan Referendum: Waving Red Flag", PacNet 48, 3 December 2003. Other questions suggested by the green camp were: whether Taiwan should join theWHO, whether the mainland should withdraw all its missiles targeting Taiwan, whether Taiwan should embrace the "one country, two systems" espoused by Beijing, whether Taiwan should have a nuclear-free homeland, and so on. These were all issues where position coincided with mainstream public opinion. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions the government's TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS Figure 6 Mapping the Trends: Nativization, Cross-Strait Engagement and International Constraints in the Early toMid 2000s Economic Interests Lien & Soong A 2003-04 Chen May 20 Chen 2003-4 k- -: SARS Soong 2000 Chen Lien 2000 2000 Unification Independence Identity Spectrurr} ->i New DPP m o o 3 O 3 in O O c S? Old DPP - & Lee&TSU 2003-04 o o o Old KMT Security Interests This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 55 THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 56 The not just this race to national 2003-04 witnessed presidential campaign and a new constitution, but also a powerful drive towards deepening of core cross-Strait The issue remained the of three establishment links. engagement. On the pan-blue to this and themselves side, both Lien and Soong had committed referenda to improved cross-Strait to honor the vowing relations conclusions as top priorities. of Taiwan's On 2001 the pan-green Economic side, besides Development Conference, which explicitly called for three links, Chen pledged he would institute direct across the Taiwan Strait by the end of 2004. The blue that Chen insincere and claiming direct camp responded by charging as as links could be established mid-2004 Lien and under transportation early transport was Soong.37 of International Reimposition Cross-Strait relations Although Taiwan's cross-Strait enormous relations cannot there was be understood electoral since influence Constraints solely has politics of domestic by way politics. into injected greater volatility it is undeniable the 1990s, relations between shaping that Washington in a happy convergence and in the preference Taiwan and exercises China. In in the positions of Taiwan's main 1999-2000, of the United candidates States to maintain the presidential status quo. This time, with Chen and Lien racing to embrace a referendum and new constitution, was taken by surprise, and so was Beijing. The Washington new CCP leadership was not ready to force a showdown with the US over Taiwan at this particular moment. It had learned a lesson in the 1995-96 crisis and on economic to concentrate wanted instead of dueling with the development world's Lien hegemon. When their anti-referendum position, and Soong were ahead in the race and sticking to no to felt need intervene. when However, Beijing the popularity of their ticket began dropping and Chen's call for referenda gained was to act. aware that sabre-rattling the sensed need momentum, Beijing Beijing would and might backfire in 2000. help Chen gain more votes, as had happened Chen's flirtation However, race as the choice and, sterner.38 became for fear of chasing However, spent most 37 38 with the to referenda issue independence gained momentum, votes into Chen's of their energy pressuring the US left Beijing with Beijing's arms, the Chinese to bring Taiwan little warnings leaders into line. 70 per cent. See Executive Popular support for three links and direct transport stands at 60 to " Yuan, "Evaluation of the Impact of Cross-Strait 'Direct Transport' (Taipei: Executive Yuan, 2003), p. 54. Maj. Gen. Wang Zaixi, deputy director of China's Taiwan Affairs Office, stated bluntly that "If the Taiwan authorities collude with all splittist forces to openly engage in pro-independence of force may the mainland and the 'one-China' the use challenge principle, was This the first such blatant issued unavoidable", warning by a activities become and stern warning to Taiwan's voters on the Chinese official since former Premier Zhu Rongji's eve of Taiwan's Wang's remarks 2000 were which elections, presidential as Zhu's, not as publicized Chen they had won a much by a narrow lower effect This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Because margin. on the island. TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS 57 view that Chen had been the status quo, and shared Beijing's favored Washington the of Taiwan's towards officials. denials it, despite repeated scrapping tilting to the extent of not line is to support Taiwan's bottom democracy Washington's the "one-China This is to prevent a showdown with Beijing violating principle". an over issue not central to US interests (namely, whether is recognized Taiwan as an independent a the 1990s vivendi which modus state). Throughout developed use not to to not and Taiwan force for called for Beijing declare independence. Washington had come would this tacit agreement. limits were vivendi, underwrite out of the modus in writing Although nothing on and put Beijing's Taipei's behavior. Beijing learned it the hard way in the 1995-96 Taiwan Strait missile crisis, which had gained it nothing, while Taipei had yet to test the limits. Chen's with flirtation close Taiwan's independence in his presidential came campaign very to such a test. In Figure 6 I have used dotted grey lines to delineate the area of political toWashington. As Chen's tolerable deviated maneuvering presidential campaign into the "forbidden to US officials raise their voices and issue zone", began was put on the DPP. When statements of disapproval. the pressure Mounting law passed Yuan, the DPP caucus forced one through the Legislative a blatantly to withdraw of its members referendum bill from pro-independence a on vote the floor, and when the pan-blue forced the DPP bill, parties legislators en bloc. It was Washington's abstained that ultimately influenced the pressure two carefully worded and the referendum Bush Administration found questions, referendum to oppose these (to buy more US weapons and to reach a compromise was with Beijing). still worried to about Chen's However, Washington plan rewrite the constitution, and relations between Washington and Taipei were in dire need of repair. it difficult On 20 March Chen narrowly defeated his pan-blue Lien challenger or a mere cent. 0.2 per An assassination Chan by 30,000 votes, attempt against a and his running mate Annette Chen Lu on the eve of the election generated a vote that well have role in the election's sympathy might played determining outcome. But Chen won the election mainly tide of by riding on the surging Taiwanese 2004, consciousness. in capturing Chen realized effective campaign vote against to mend and to stabilize Administration was his plan declaring His the protest the need immediately to rewrite the constitution, Taiwan's On independence. strategy China. of radicalization his with relationship cross-Strait relations. The which 20 May, would in his be considered inauguration proved the Bush focal point tantamount to speech, Chen reneged on this electoral promise and instead contented himself with changing the government structure The issue of through current amendment procedures. was on was the back burner. It known that put unification/independence widely US officials had previewed the speech.39 Even though it remains to be seen whether Chen will resume his campaign pledge to push for independence by 2008, sometime in his second term the post-election thus far developments suggest that the pressure 39 John Tkacik, "Whose One China? The Bush Administration Subtly Changes Tack", National Review Online, June 3,2004, at www.nationalreview.com/comment/tkacik200406030908.asp. This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 58 THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 fromWashington has persuadedChen to pull back from the forbidden zone (see Figure 6). International constraints on Taiwan. have been reimposed The Strategic Triangle shifts, it is clear, are constricted by, and need to be viewed within the of, an ever-evolving strategic triangle between United Taiwan and China. While Taiwan's is threatened States, security by the no can ever it is guaranteed and the in to leader Taiwan afford mainland, US, by two are these cardinal facts. Taiwanese electoral neglect politicians swayed by Taiwan's domestic political the context and international pressures competition alternately. in Taiwan Just as domestic affects towards the Chinese its policy politics a the evolution similar logic lies behind of both Washington's China mainland, policy and Beijing's Taiwan policy. Presidential elections politicians Washington's the US President usually its growing power while endeavoring Here and to debate their positions takes a realist approach its cooperation seeking to check its influence when At other times, the PRC, recognizing in regional and global issues, towards China. towards the interests international in the US prompt of the two countries When elections presidential is subject to criticism however, approach, policy by in the his political based and in the press, and the idealists opponents Congress to appease incumbent them and interest groups in the electorate. takes actions it does not take long before realism again reigns, After the presidential elections, diverge. realpolitik reigns. the incumbent's realist China course to reflect the country's business and changes president on domestic to concentrate interests. Elections force security politicians which stress idealism. When from preferences, always relatively emancipated are to international electoral and realism pressure, politicians geared politics, and the new creeps back.40 The policy-makers the US Beijing's 41 face constraints in Taiwan, but real nevertheless. a legitimating has become on attitude issue is one the Taiwan and mainland 40 in China and less direct than those faced in Since nationalism is rising on the factor for the Communist regime, of intransigent irredentism.41 Under these periodic changes in Washington's China policy is a discernible Accompanying concern over trend China's towards greater long-term rising power and a possible Sino-US clash in the foreseeable future, probably over the Taiwan issue. See, for example, Richard Bernstein and Ross H. Monroe, The Coming Conflict with China (New York: Knopf, 1997); Michael Swain and Ashley Tellis, Interpreting China's Grand Strategy: Past, Present, and Future (Santa Monica: RAND, 2000); David A. Shlapak, David T. Orletsky and Barry A. Wilson, Dire Strait? Military Aspects of the China-Taiwan Confrontation and Options for U.S. Policy (Santa Monica: RAND, 2000); Jonathan D. Pollack, "American Perceptions of Chinese Military Power", inHerbert Yee and Ian Storey (eds), The China Threat: Perceptions, Myths and Reality (London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2002), pp. 43-64; and Kao-cheng Wang, 'The United States Military Security Policy Towards China", inMartin Edmonds and Michael M. Tsai (eds), Defending Taiwan: The Future Version of Taiwan's Defence Policy and Military Strategy (London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003), pp. 13-28. Taiwan has played an important role in the development of the mainland's This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions surging 59 TAIWAN'S DOMESTIC POLITICS AND CROSS-STRAIT RELATIONS leader with indisputable these circumstances, authority political only a paramount weaker the leader's Taiwan.42 The can take a soft-line towards grip on approach In China, the he is when the more power, dealing with Taiwan. intransigent are to in the elections the functional Party's congresses equivalents presidential in that there is jockeying US and in Taiwan, among the leaders in the run-up to a to seem popularly in the this circumstance leader wants and congress, paramount to the to expect to shore up his power.43 It is reasonable challenges a Party congress to rise when is approaching, and the political leader incumbent a to when applied to be in defensive This generalization, mood when challenged. on Taiwan the Chinese issue, greater maneuverability suggests policy-making to Taiwan when the incumbent is secure leader's power and possible concessions as against intransigence when the during the intervals between Party congresses, resolute next is in the offing. congress to of whether It is also a question the leader has yet had an opportunity The first Hu Jintao Jiabao in installed Wen the consolidate power newly place. on Taiwan. The relations between to be flexible is not strong enough leadership the front-line leaders Party and the retired mentor, Jiang Zemin, and his entourage in the Politburo still needed to be worked out, making it extremely difficult for any leader to appear "soft" towards Taiwan. With China's top leaders locked in the Taiwan Strait are real. the chances of serious conflicts hard positions, into Viewed in this perspective, the 2004 presidential election in Taiwan and its and entail enormous risks. On the Taiwan aftermath side, spell great uncertainties mass as has been in the the change off a race to touched seen, psychology embrace referenda and a new constitution. stir up popular emotions Elections and turn politicians into populists. followed by the parliamentary to fuel identity debate continues The in March election presidential in December. election Electoral and to poison cross-Strait relations. 2004 was competition The need for President Chen to complete with Lee Teng-hui of theTSU for the fundamentalist vote nationalism. paper See presented to make statements and provocative pro-independence a from Washington, in election.44 replay of the presidential Chen again prompted to defy disapproval Lowell at "Taiwan Dittmer, the Conference on as a Factor the Studies, TEDS Committee, Taipei, November two nationalisms across the Taiwan Strait, 2002 in China's Taiwan's Quest Election for National and Identity", Democratization 1, 2003. For the possible conflict between see Wang Feiling, "Zhonghua beiju: the Haixia liang'an jijiang lailin de minzuzhuyi da chongtu" (The Chinese Tragedy: The Coming across the Taiwan Strait), in Lin Chia-lung and Zheng Conflict between Nationalisms Yongnian (eds), Minzuzhuyi yu liang'an guanxi (Nationalism and Cross-Strait Relations) (Taipei: Thirdnature, 2001), pp. 409-32. 42 43 44 See Parris Chang, "Beijing's Policy Toward Taiwan: An Elite Conflict Model", Cheng, Chi Huang and Samuel S. G. Wu (eds), Inherited Rivalry, pp. 65-79. in Tun-jen It is true that the outcome of the intra-party factional struggle is usually sealed before the party congress is held, and the congress only serves the function of ratifying the result of elite competition that took place beforehand. However, the regularly held Party congresses still provide a rough schedule for the power struggles in the upper echelons of the CCP. Five days before the parliamentary elections, Chen pledged to remove the word "China" from This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 60 THE CHINA JOURNAL, NO. 53 in a replay, Again Taiwan's politics resumed after normalcy the parliamentary elections and Chen's government began dealing with Washington and Beijing in a more realistic way. In short, the evolution of Taiwan's electoral toward China illustrates politics are embedded how cross-Strait relations in a tripartite game.45 Both international In this game, domestic and domestic factors are important. the politics provide momentum for all three governments, while the interactions set the three among the within parameters democratization which has act.46 to added Since the Taiwan's 1990s, The 2003-04 game. tripartite off chain reactions that immediately politicians this volatility for instance, touched presidential campaign, It is not unlikely involved all three players. that in future the momentum for come or in could the from PRC US. At the the this changes tripartite game stage, of greatest the source in the Washington-Beijing-Taipei though, volatility domestic its presidential electoral triangle remains Taiwan's politics, particularly cycles.47 the titles state of Taiwan's clear move and missions enterprises toward further de-Sinification made Department it clear that it does not abroad and to replace on the island. Two days support such moves that it with "appear a 'Taiwan", later, the US State to unilaterally change Taiwan's status". Chen replied by telling a rally that he intended to go ahead with the name-change and cited the futility of previous US warnings against his March referendum. 45 Jih-wen Remaking 46 Lin, "Two-Level Games Between of Cross-Strait Relations", pp. 1-26. For a discussion of the international Rival Regimes: Domestic Politics the and Issues and Studies, Vol. 36, No. 6 (November 2000), aspect triangular of cross-Strait relations, see Bao Tzong-Ho, "Zhanlue sanjiao jiaose zhuanbian yu leixing bianhua fenxi?yi Meiguo han Tai-Hai liang'an sanjiao hudong weili" (An Analysis of Role Transition and Type Change in a Strategic Triangle: The Case of Triangular Interaction Between the US and the Two Sides of the Taiwan Strait), in Bao Tzong-Ho andWu Yu-Shan (eds), Zhengbian zhong de liang'an guanxi lilun, pp. 337-63; and Yu-Shan Wu, "Does Chen's Election Make Any Difference? Domestic and International Constraints on Taipei, Washington, and Beijing," in Muthiah Alagappa (ed.), Taiwan's Presidential Politics: Democratization and Cross-Strait Relations in the Twenty-First Century (Armonk:M. E. Sharpe, 2001), pp. 155-92. 47 Obviously, Beijing also took initiatives towards Taiwan in the 1990s, such as Jiang Zemin's those initiatives were rendered ineffective by Eight Points of January 1995. However, Taiwan's drive towards greater assertiveness in the midst of severe domestic political competition. For an examination of the PRC's Taiwan policy shifts, see Michael Swain, "Chinese Decision-Making Regarding Taiwan, 1979-2000", inDavid M. Lampton (ed.), The Making of Chinese Foreign and Security Policy (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2001). This content downloaded from 137.205.238.199 on Wed, 14 May 2014 17:20:53 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions