Cablegate: Taiwan's December Election: Reference Guide
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120925Z Oct 05
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 TAIPEI 004158
SIPDIS
SENSITIVE
STATE PASS AIT/W
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV TW
SUBJECT: TAIWAN'S DECEMBER ELECTION: REFERENCE GUIDE
REF: TAIPEI 3642
1. On December 3 Taiwan will hold key local "three-in-one"
elections for (1) county magistrates and city mayors, (2)
county and city councilors, and (3) township and village
chiefs. The county magistrate and city mayor elections,
however, are receiving the lion's share of media attention as
a test of strength between ruling and opposition parties and
as an indicator of trends heading into legislative and
presidential elections in 2007 and 2008. A total of 77
candidates are registered to run in the 18 county magistrate
elections and five city mayor elections (excluding Taipei
City and Kaohsiung City, which hold mayoral elections in
2006). The competition is primarily between the "Pan-Green"
(independence-leaning) Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and
the "Pan-Blue" (tending toward improving relations with the
PRC) Kuomintang (KMT), with several smaller parties and
independent candidates also vying for positions. The fellow
Pan-Green Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) has only one
candidate for mayor in Tainan, while the Pan-Blue People's
First Party (PFP) and New Party have five candidates in play
in various elections.
2. KMT officials hope to win back Taipei, Ilan, and Nantou
Counties. On the other hand, the DPP hopes to take one or
more counties from the KMT but faces strong challenges in
Taipei and Ilan Counties, and Chiayi City. The DPP is
concerned about the effect of negative publicity from recent
scandals on party election prospects, and the KMT hopes to
gain a boost from its new Chairman, the youthful and
energetic Ma Ying-jeou. The most important race for both
parties is Taipei County, which is by far the most populous
electoral district on the island.
3. Following is a catalogue of Taiwan's 23 election
districts with lists of registered candidates, biographical
notes, and an early status report, jointly prepared by AIT/T
and AIT/K.
------------
Keelung City
------------
Candidates:
KMT: Hsu Tsai-li (Incumbent)
Keelung native; served as member and Speaker of Keelung City
Council for 20 years.
PFP: Liu Wen-hsiung (LY Member, Keelung City)
Keelung native; Legislative Yuan (LY) Member since 1998,
first for the KMT, then re-elected for the PFP in 2001 and
2004.
TSU: Chen Chien-ming (former TSU Secretary General)
SIPDIS
Left KMT to join TSU in 2001; served as LY Member for Taipei
City, 2001-2004.
Comment: Both Pan-Blue coalition candidates, KMT's Hsu and
PFP's Liu, insist on staying in the race, with Liu citing
Hsu,s age and health problems (diabetes) as a reason to run.
The DPP nominee (Wang Tuo) dropped out of the race October 3
and endorsed TSU candidate Chen, giving the Pan-Green
coalition a single candidate around whom to rally. While
this might enhance Chen,s chances by dividing the Pan-Blue
vote (which occurred in 1997), Chen is not a Keelung native
and has not previously been involved in Keelung politics.
Furthermore, recent surveys conducted by Era TV, United Daily
News (UDN), and the China Times show Pan-Blue candidates
leading the Pan-Green candidates by a small margin, but with
a significant number of undecided voters. (Comment: While
Taiwan media polls have often proven unreliable in previous
elections, they can offer some indications of trends. With
that healthy measure of caution, we will include them in this
early pre-campaign preview. End comment.)
-------------
Taipei County
-------------
Candidates:
DPP: Lo Wen-jia
Taipei City native; former Vice Chair of the Council of Hakka
Affairs; served as campaign manager for President Chen
Shui-bian and as LY Member for Taipei City (2001-2004).
KMT: Chou Hsi-wei
Taipei County native; MPA from University of Southern
California; served as LY Member for Taipei County since 1998;
served in Taiwan Provincial Assembly (1994-1998).
Comment: Lo, who is popular among younger voters and is a
proven campaign organizer, is emphasizing his Hakka ancestry
to attract votes from this sizable minority in Taipei County.
His strategy of keeping his distance from the DPP leadership
in a county that has a majority of Pan-Blue voters may also
improve his vote. Meanwhile, public opinion polls show Lo
and Chou nearly even, with Chou's popularity on the decline.
Chou left the PFP to rejoin the KMT earlier this year,
believing it would strengthen his chances of being elected in
Taipei county. He is turning to the popular new KMT
Chairman, Ma Ying-jeou, for support in hopes of winning the
county back from the DPP for the first time in 16 years.
--------------
Taoyuan County
--------------
KMT: Eric Chu Li-lun (Incumbent)
Earned M.A. and Ph.D. from New York University; taught at
National Taiwan University; served as LY Member, Taoyuan
County (1998-2001).
DPP: Cheng Pao-ching
Served as LY member (1995-2001); appointed Chairman of
state-run Taiwan Salt Corp. after failing in his bid for a
third term.
Comment: Chu tied for the highest approval ratings of all
city mayors and county magistrates in Taiwan according to a
Commonwealth Monthly poll in September. To date, DPP
candidate Cheng Pao-ching has made little progress attracting
voters in what is widely considered a safe Blue county. The
withdrawal of a second Pan-Blue PFP candidate only increased
Chu,s lead.
------------
Hsinchu City
------------
Candidates:
KMT: Lin Cheng-che (Incumbent)
Hsinchu native; M.A. from National University (U.S.).
DPP: Chen Hui-yuan (Hsinchu City Councilor)
Member of Hsinchu City Council for 12 years; served as Chen
Shui-bian,s Hsinchu City campaign manager in 2000 and 2004.
Comment: Lin is maintaining a large lead over Chen in all
public opinion polls to date. The September Commonwealth
Monthly survey found almost 73 percent of Hsinchu City
residents are satisfied with Lin's performance as Mayor.
Recent China Times polls similarly show Lin with 50 percent
support to Chen's seven percent, and 43 percent of poll
respondents still undecided.
--------------
Hsinchu County
--------------
Candidates:
KMT: Cheng Yung-chin (Incumbent)
Hsinchu native; served as Member, Deputy Speaker, and Speaker
of Hsinchu County Council (1992-1997); served as Hsinchu
County Legislator (1997-2001).
DPP: Lin Kuang-hua (Taiwan Provincial Governor)
Hsinchu native; served as Member of Hsinchu County Council,
Hsinchu County Legislator (1992-1997), and Hsinchu County
Magistrate (1997-2001).
Comment: Cheng received the third highest approval rating in
the September Commonwealth Monthly survey of Taiwan county
magistrates and city mayors. The DPP is not optimistic about
winning Hsinchu County, but Lin is trying to use Cheng,s
earlier pledge not to seek reelection to attack his
credibility. The charge has not struck much resonance,
however, as Cheng,s poll numbers have continued to rise. In
an October 3 UDN poll, 47 percent of respondents favored
Cheng, though 38 percent remained undecided.
-------------
Miaoli County
-------------
Candidates:
KMT: Liu Cheng-hung (LY Member)
Miaoli native; has served as LY Member from Miaoli since
1998; earlier served in Miaoli City Council for eight years.
DPP: Chiu Ping-kun
Miaoli native; served as Mayor of Miaoli City for eight years
and before that served on the Miaoli City Council.
Independent: Hsu Yao-chang
Miaoli native; has served as LY Member from Miaoli County
since 2001; served as Toufeng Town Chief; a PFP member, Hsu
is running as independent.
Comment: Incumbent County Magistrate Fu Hsueh-peng, an
independent not running for reelection, has agreed to
cooperate with the DPP and support DPP candidate Chiu, who
withdrew from the KMT to join the DPP after the KMT nominated
a non-Hakka politician as its candidate in the race. Chiu
may be hurt by President Chen Shui-bian,s reported promise
of a Central Government job for Fu if Chiu wins. Although
the KMT's Liu has a modest lead in recent Era TV and China
Times polls, his chances may be jeopardized by PFP Legislator
Hsu Yao-chang,s insistence on running as an independent
Hakka candidate who can unite the county's Hakka majority,
thus splitting the Pan-Blue vote in what is usually a
strongly Blue county. Three other independent candidates are
also running in this race, but they are not considered viable
candidates and were not included in recent polls.
-------------
Taichung City
-------------
Candidates:
KMT: Jason Hu Chih-chiang (Incumbent)
Born in China; Ph.D. from Oxford University; served as
Director of Government Information Office, Taiwan
Representative to the United States, Foreign Minister, and
KMT Secretary-General.
PFP: Shen Chih-hui (LY Member, Taichung City)
Taichung City native; Taichung City LY Member since 1989; KMT
member before joining PFP in 2000; background in journalism.
DPP: Lin Chia-lung
Taichung City native; Ph.D. from Yale; former Director of the
Government Information Office; served on the National
Security Council; served as member of the National Assembly.
Independent: Lee Fu-kui
Comment: Hu,s health has remained a concern since he
suffered from a minor stroke last year. Lin is young, has a
good public image, and has the full support from President
Chen Shui-bian and other DPP leaders. Shen may withdraw from
the election depending on the outcome of the on-going
negotiations between the KMT and the PFP. Hu, however, has a
considerable lead in the polls. The latest Era TV poll in
August Hu had 48 percent support, DPP challenger Lin had 25
percent support, and Shen about 7 percent.
---------------
Taichung County
---------------
Candidates:
KMT: Huang Chung-sheng (Incumbent)
Taichung native; served as Chief Secretary of the Wuchi Town
Farmers Association and an advisor to the KMT and the China
Youth Corps.
DPP: Chiu Tai-san (Vice Chairman, MAC)
Taichung native; LY Member, Taichung County (1998-2004);
served as Vice Chairman of the Mainland Affairs Council
(2004-2005).
Independent: Lin Cheng-chang
Comment: Despite incumbent KMT County Magistrate Huang,s
deep ties with local factions and high approval ratings in
recent months, he faces a strong challenge from the DPP's
Chiu. Independent candidate Lin is probably not a serious
threat to either candidate. The DPP views Taichung County as
an important battleground and potential win for the party.
The young and energetic Chiu is backed by President Chen
Shui-bian and the DPP,s New Tide Faction. Although Huang
had a healthy 16-point lead in the September Commonwealth
Magazine poll, nearly half of poll respondents were
undecided. The DPP is hoping for a last minute surge in
support in Taichung County, which gave DPP President Chen
Shui-bian 55 percent of the vote in the 2004 presidential
election.
---------------
Changhua County
---------------
Candidates:
KMT: Cho Po-yuan (LY Member, Changhua County)
Changhua County native; served as deputy magistrate of
Changhua County and member of the Changhua County Council; LY
Member, Changhua County, since 2001.
DPP: Weng Chin-chu (Incumbent)
Changhua County native; served as member of the National
Assembly; served as LY Member, Changhua County (1992-2001).
Independent: Chen Chin-ting (LY Member, Changhua County)
Member of Nonpartisan Solidarity Union (NSU) party; former
National Assembly Member; business background.
Comment: A member of the DPP New Tide Faction, incumbent
Magistrate Weng has been preparing for her reelection for a
long time. With a potential PFP candidate already out of the
race, Weng will be facing Cho head-to-head, and a late
September UDN poll shows Weng with a slight lead. Independent
Chen has only marginal support.
-------------
Nantou County
-------------
Candidates:
KMT: Lee Chao-ching (Mayor, Nantou City)
Former Nantou County Councilor; former director of the Nantou
City KMT branch office.
DPP: Tsai Huang-lang
Nantou County native; Nantou LY Member for 10 years; resigned
earlier this year to run for magistrate; served as Chairman
of the DPP Nantou County Committee, 1994-1995.
Independent: Lin Tsung-nan (Incumbent)
Nantou County native; M.A. from Meiji University in Japan;
withdrew from the DPP after failing to win the DPP,s
nomination.
Independent: Lin Ming-chen (Nantou County Council)
KMT member who lost the KMT nomination.
Comment: The Nantou County election is complicated by the
presence of two independent candidates, Lin Tsung-nan and Lin
Ming-chen. When they lost their respective DPP and KMT party
nominations, both bolted to run as independents. Polling by
the China Times shows the two Pan-Greens with a moderate lead
in the county, with DPP Tsai and Green Independent Lin
Tsung-nan almost tied.
SIPDIS
-------------
Yunlin County
-------------
Candidates:
KMT: Hsu Shu-po (LY Member, Yunlin)
Graduate of Luven University (Belgium); former Taiwan
Provincial Government Secretary-General; has served as Yunlin
LY Member since 1995.
DPP: Su Chih-fen
Daughter of prominent Taiwan politicians Su Tung-chi (father)
and Su Hung Yueh-chiao (mother); served as campaign assistant
to a number of DPP politicians including former DPP Chairman
Shih Ming-te, former legislator Chou Ching-yu and acting
Kaohsiung mayor Yeh Chu-lan; Member of the National Assembly
(1996-1999); advisor to the Executive Yuan (1999-2000);
served as LY Member, Yunlin County (2001-2004).
Independent: Lin Chia-yu
Comment: The DPP's Su is a major political rival of
incumbent KMT Yunlin County Magistrate Chang Jung-wei, who is
in custody on corruption charges. The current acting DPP
Magistrate, appointed in Chang,s place by Premier Hsieh,
supports Su. A recent China Times polls shows a very close
race, with Su holding a narrow two-point lead over KMT's Hsu,
and almost half of voters still undecided. Independent
candidate Lin is not a viable candidate.
-----------
Chiayi City
-----------
Candidates:
KMT: Huang Min-hui (LY Member, Chiayi)
Former high school teacher; served in the National Assembly;
first elected as LY member in 2001.
DPP: Chen Li-chen (Incumbent)
Master in Environmental Medicine, China Medical College,
Taiwan; BA in Public Hygiene Dept., China Medical College,
Taiwan.
Comment: Incumbent DPP Mayor Chen Li-chen, who is very
worried about her re-election prospects, is in a
neck-and-neck race with KMT candidate Huang Min-hui, who has
an excellent reputation and a high popularity rating. A
late-September China Times poll shows the candidates in a
statistical dead heat, with 40 percent of voters still
undecided.
-------------
Chiayi County
-------------
Candidates:
KMT: Chen Ming-cheng (KMT Chiayi County Chairman)
Recently drafted by KMT to run.
DPP: Chen Ming-wen (Incumbent)
Bachelor, Philosophy Department of Tung Hai University,
Taiwan.
Comment: Incumbent Magistrate Chen Ming-wen is relatively
popular in office, with a 65 percent approval rating in a
September Commonwealth magazine survey. The KMT announced a
candidate at the last minute because they were having trouble
finding anyone to run (see reftel). The incumbent appears
very likely to be reelected since KMT candidate Chen
Min-chen, who is chairman of Chiayi County Chapter, is weak
in terms of popularity and administrative resources. An
October 1 China Times poll shows DPP,s Chen has almost 48
percent support, while the KMT,s Chen trails with only 8.5
percent.
-----------
Tainan City
-----------
Candidates:
KMT: Chen Jung-sheng
Bachelor in Public Administration, Tung Hai University,
Taiwan; studied at Seattle City Community University; ran as
a KMT candidate in the 2001 Mayoral election; former Tainan
City Councilor (1987-1991); former Provincial Assembly member
(1991-1995).
DPP: Hsu Tain-tsair (Incumbent)
BA and MA in Economics, Chinese Culture University, Taipei;
studied at Rutgers University, New Jersey, in a business
administration doctoral program.
TSU: Chien-Lin Hui-chun (TSU Tainan City Chairperson)
SIPDIS
Former Legislator (2002-2004).
Comment: Although the KMT candidate is not particularly
strong, TSU candidate Chien-Lin joined the race, which could
split the Pan-Green vote. So far, incumbent Mayor Hsu is
still leading in the polls, but running against two opponents
has complicated the race. KMT candidate Chen, who is weak
both in terms of personal charm and administrative resources,
is running for his third time for this mayoral position. An
Era TV poll in late September showed the DPP,s Hsu with 31
percent support, followed by the KMT,s Chen at 17.5 percent,
and the TSU,s Chien-Lin at 10.9 percent.
-------------
Tainan County
-------------
Candidates:
KMT: Kuo Tien-tsai
Doctor in Education, National Cheng Chi University, Taipei;
Master in Education, National Kaohsiung Normal University,
Kaohsiung; post-doctorate research, Illinois University;
former LY Member (2001-2004).
DPP: Su Huan-chih (Tainan County Magistrate)
LL.B., National Taiwan University, Taipei; LL.M., Fujen
Catholic University, Taipei.
Independent: Chang Po-sheng
Served as campaign assistant to Magistrate Su and President
Chen during their previous campaigns. It was a surprise to
the DPP that he registered as candidate.
Independent: Tsai Ssu-chieh
Retired government employee. This is his fourth time running
in the magistrate election. He favors using the flood as his
main issue in campaign.
Comment: The DPP cannot afford to lose in President Chen,s
home county as such a loss would reflect the inherent
weakness and lack of popularity of the Chen administration.
Although Magistrate Su is leading in the polls, his
performance is not considered good. The KMT,s candidate is
young, highly educated, and "clean", so Kuo and Chairman Ma
Ying-jeou may press very hard for a win in this election.
Although there are two independent candidates, this is still
considered a race between the DPP and KMT.
----------------
Kaohsiung County
----------------
Candidates:
KMT: Lin Yi-shih (LY Member, Kaohsiung)
Son of Lin Hsien-pao; the leader of the "Red Faction" in
Kaohsiung County; supported Wang Jin-pyng in the KMT Chairman
election; first elected to LY, Kaohsiung County, in 1998.
DPP: Yang Chiu-hsing (Incumbent)
Served as Provincial Assembly Member in 1994; served as LY
Member, Kaohsiung County, in 1998.
Comment: Incumbent Magistrate Yang,s approval rating in the
September Commonwealth survey was over 70 percent, and he was
more than 15 points ahead of KMT candidate Lin in a
late-September TVBS poll. The KMT candidate, however, has
seen his poll numbers rise from a early low of 9 percent to
his current 29 percent support. Kaohsiung County is
generally considered to be a safe Green county, but the KMT
is hoping the image of their young, well-educated, and
spanking clean candidate will gel with the Ma Ying-jeou,s
reform message, bringing out more undecided voters.
---------------
Pingtung County
---------------
Candidates:
KMT: Wang Chin-shih (Incumbent)
Master in Public Affairs, National Sun-Yat-Sen University,
Kaohsiung.
DPP: Tsao Chi-hung
Bachelor in Education, Chinese Culture University, Taipei;
former National Assembly Member (1992-1994); former
Provincial Assembly Member (1994-1998); former LY Member
(1999-2004).
Independent: Soong Li-hua (Pingtung County Councilor)
Wife of independent, but pro-KMT, LY Member Tsai Hao; served
on Pingtung County Council since 2002.
Independent: Lee Ching-wen
He is an old face in Pingtung who has run in all legislative,
magisterial and city council elections in the past ten years.
Comment: Since Soong,s husband is pro-KMT, her candidacy
could split the Pan-Blue votes. The DPP has welcomed Soong's
run in the hope of boosting Tsao,s chance to win. Local
observers note that the recent investigation by authorities
of independent candidate Soong for vote-buying might actually
boost her popularity and prospects as the highly telegenic
Soong may use it to gain support from sympathetic voters.
The race between DPP candidate Tsao Chi-hung and KMT
candidate Wang Chin-shi, before Soong joined the race, was
already very close. A late-September UDN poll shows a
virtual tie between Wang and Tsao, with Soong trailing by
about 5 points, but 49 percent of voters are undecided.
-----------
Ilan County
-----------
Candidates:
KMT: Lu Kuo-hua (Mayor, Ilan City)
Ilan County native; Lu has worked in the Taiwan Provincial
Government; served as a section chief in the Ilan County
Government; and as Mayor of Ilan City.
DPP: Chen Ting-nan
Served as Ilan County Magistrate (1981-1989); then as Ilan LY
Member (1989-2000); Minister of Justice (2000-2005).
Independent: Hsieh Lee Ching-yi
Comment: As the former county Magistrate, the DPP's Chen
appeared to enjoy the upper hand in the early weeks of the
pre-campaign , but KMT's Lu has been catching up rapidly in
public opinion polls in recent weeks, probably because of his
youthful image and pledge to revitalize Ilan,s economy. Lu
may get a further boost from the PFP candidate's decision to
drop out of the race at registration time. This is Lu,s
second run for Ilan Magistrate, having lost in the previous
election by just 7,000 votes. Chen and Lu are nearly tied
according to various opinion polls, giving the KMT a chance
of winning Ilan for the first time in 24 years. Pan-Greens,
however, enjoy a 55 percent majority of voters in Ilan
County.
--------------
Hualien County
--------------
Candidates:
KMT: Hsieh Shen-shan (Incumbent)
Former Chairman of the National Federation of Labor Union;
legislator, KMT deputy Secretary-General and
Secretary-General of the Executive Yuan.
SIPDIS
PFP: Fu Kun-chi (LY Member, Hualien County)
Served as Vice Chairman of the World Federation of Taiwanese
Chamber of Commerce; has served as Hualien LY Member since
2001.
DPP: Lu Po-chi (LY Member, Hualien County)
Hualien native; served as Member of the Hualien County
Council; has served as Hualien LY Member since 2001.
Independent: Ko Tzu-hai
Comment: Incumbent KMT Magistrate Hsieh enjoys strong local
support with nearly 66 percent job approval rating in the
September Commonwealth magazine poll. DPP challenger Lu will
probably campaign on his close relationship with the central
government, but Hsieh,s lead may be insurmountable.
Pan-Blue PFP candidate Fu, currently facing legal problems,
is drawing little support. A China Times poll in September
shows Hsieh with 52 percent support, compared to Lu's 9.4
percent and Fu's 6.4 percent. Independent candidate Ko is
not a viable candidate.
--------------
Taitung County
--------------
Candidates:
KMT running as Independent: Wu Chun-li (Speaker, Taitung
County Council)
Graduate of Ho-chun Technical Junior College, Kaohsiung
County.
DPP running as Independent: Liu Chao-hao (Deputy Magistrate)
His elder brother was a former National Assembly member and a
KMT member; former Judge serving for 6 years.
Independent: Peng Chuan-kuo
Has never run for political office before, the name is
totally new, emerging only on registration day.
Comment: This race came as a surprise because both DPP and
KMT have their members running as independent candidates.
Incumbent Magistrate Hsu Ching-yuan (independent and former
PFP member) gave up his bid for re-election, thus allowing
his deputy, Liu Chao-hao, a DPP member, to register at the
last minute as an independent candidate. Wu Chun-li, who
would have registered as a KMT candidate, instead registered
as an independent candidate, allegedly at the insistence of
Chairman Ma in order to avoid the issue of the lawsuit and
sentencing lodged against Wu for corruption.
Previous polls showed the current Magistrate Hsu,s approval
rating at 32.8 percent, Wu,s at 19 percent, and 44 percent
undecided. Whether Hsu,s deputy, Liu will be able to
inherit Hsu,s support in the polls is doubtful, not to
mention that Liu has not even prepared his campaign. But
Liu, who is a new face in politics, will put KMT on the
attack in the election.
-------------
Penghu County
-------------
Candidates:
KMT: Wang Chien-fa (Makung City Mayor)
Served in the County Government as Director of the Tax Bureau
and Bureau of Finance; serving as Mayor of Makung City, which
accounts for half of Penghu,s population.
DPP: Chen Kuang-fu (DPP Penghu County Office Chairman)
Chen lost the last LY election to Lin Ping-kun, who has had
strong support from local residents over the past decade;
served as Kaohsiung City LY member (1992-1998); lost as the
DPP candidate for Magistrate in 2001; stayed in Penghu to
serve as DPP Office Chairman in order to cultivate
connections for the upcoming elections.
Independent: Hsu Ching-ming
Former DPP member who ran in the last LY election in 2004 and
lost.
Comment: DPP candidate Chen Kuang-fu and KMT candidate Wang
Chien-fa are in a very close race. Local observers say Chen
Kuang-fu has a good chance to win since he is competing
against a different opponent from a previous legislative
election. Although KMT has dominated the county for long
time, the DPP anticipates a real shot at a win in this race.
-------------
Kinmen County
-------------
New Party: Lee Chu-feng (Incumbent)
Kinmen County native; served as Secretary of Kinmen County
Government; served as LY Member, Kinmen County.
Independent: Chen Ping
Independent: Chen Fu-hai
Comment: The KMT, PFP, and New Party have jointly agreed to
support Lee, who will likely win a second term in this "deep
Blue" county. The two independent candidates pose little
threat.
-------------------------
Lienchiang County (Matsu)
-------------------------
PFP: Chen Hsueh-sheng (Incumbent)
Independent: Yang Sui-sheng
Independent: Wu Shih-Tsu
Comment: Both the KMT and PFP have agreed to support Chen's
continued leadership of this Pan-Blue stronghold. Chen is
expected to win another term.
PAAL