Cablegate: Bios of Newly Elected Mayors and Magistrates -
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
280620Z Dec 05
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 TAIPEI 004986
SIPDIS
DEPT FOR EAP/TC, INR/EAP
FROM AIT KAOHSIUNG BRANCH OFFICE
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PINR ECON TW
SUBJECT: Bios of Newly Elected Mayors and Magistrates -
Part II (Kaohsiung County, Pingtung County, Taitung County,
and Penghu County)
REFS: A) 2005 TAIPEI 3642, B) 2005 TAIPEI 4746, C)2005
TAIPEI 4684, D)2005 TAIPEI 4399, E) 2005 TAIPEI 4886
1. In the "3-in-1 local elections" on December 3 (REF A),
the ruling DPP won city mayor/county magistrate seats in
five cities/counties in southern Taiwan - Chiayi County,
Tainan County (REF C), Tainan City (REF D), Kaohsiung
County, and Pingtung County. The KMT won in Chiayi City
(REF B) for the first time in 23 years and kept its
magisterial seat in Penghu County. Taitung County (REF E)
was won by an independent candidate who is still a KMT
member. This report provides bio information for the newly
elected magistrates of Kaohsiung, Pingtung, Taitung, and
Penghu counties.
2. Kaohsiung County Magistrate Yang Chiu-hsing (DPP)
--------------------------------------------- --------
Born in 1956, Yang is the incumbent Magistrate elected in
2001.
Yang has a master's degree in Civil Engineering from
National Taiwan University. He was elected as a Provincial
Assembly member in 1994 and as a Legislator in 1998. Before
became an elected official, he was a civil servant engineer
working for both the Kaohsiung City and County Governments.
Yang's strong grass roots support, including from "pan-blue"
factions in the county, made this an easy race for him.
3. Pingtung County Magistrate Tsao Chi-hung (DPP)
--------------------------------------------- -----
Born in 1948, Tsao is a former Legislator (1999-2004),
former Provincial Assembly member (1994-98) and former
National Assembly member (1992-94).
Tsao holds a BA in Education from the Chinese Culture
SIPDIS
University, Taipei, and taught at a junior high school
before his election to the Legislature. As a ruling party
legislator, Tsao felt that "changing Taiwan" could not rely
on politicians. Instead, he hoped that political enthusiasm
could be transferred to improving one's community. He has
advocated "community development projects" to promote the
idea of improving living environments in Taiwan.
4. Taitung County Magistrate Wu Chun-li (KMT)
--------------------------------------------- --
Born in 1962, Wu is the incumbent Speaker of Taitung County
Council elected in 2002.
Wu is a graduate of National Kaohsiung University of Applied
Science, Kaohsiung. He was the KMT candidate in the 2001
magisterial election, but was defeated by former Magistrate
Hsu.
Before the election, the Ministry of Interior (MOI) declared
Wu would be suspended from his post immediately if elected
because he had been convicted in a corruption scandal.
Before his recent December 20 swearing-in ceremony, the MOI
publicly reiterated its intention. During the December 20
ceremony, Wu appointed his ex-wife as Deputy Magistrate to
have her act on his behalf. Wu divorced his wife on
December 19 deliberately to bypass the nepotism law which
forbids elected officials from appointing family members to
public office.
The MOI invalidated this appointment since, they argued, Wu
had no authority to appoint subordinates since he had been
suspended from the magistrate position. The MOI has
appointed Taitung County Government Secretary-general Lai
Shun-hsien as Acting Magistrate. There are legal questions
regarding the MOI's actions. Wu's supporters claim the MOI
has no standing to invalidate Wu's swearing-in since he was
convicted prior to his election, not after it. Over the
next few months, this case will be argued in court and, in
the long run, there could be possible clarifications to the
election law.
In the near future, the MOI will have to call a by-election
to elect a "legitimate magistrate." If Wu runs again and
wins his supporters claim that, according to the current
"Local Autonomy Law," the MOI will have no further legal
right to remove him again from the magisterial seat.
Apparently, Wu is planning to run in the by-election. If
not allowed to run, Wu's ex-wife intends to run.
5. Penghu County - Wang Chien-fa (KMT)
--------------------------------------------- ---
Born in 1948, Wang is the incumbent Makung City Mayor (the
biggest city in Penghu County where half of the county's
residents live), elected in 2002.
Wang, a native of Makung City, is a graduate of National
Open University. Before being elected as Makung City Mayor,
Wang served in the County Government as Director of the Tax
Bureau and Bureau of Finance.
Wang's older brother was Penghu County Magistrate from 1989
until his death in 1992.
THIELE
PAAL