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Updated Monday, October 5, 2009 10:19 am TWN, By Joe Hung, Special to The China Post Let's have more logical thinkingOf course, they are slips of the tongue. Perhaps the president was so impatient and eager to restart the reform he didn't carry out during his brief previous stint as party chairman that he made the gaffes. He wants the Kuomintang to be really clean. He had to quit as chairman and suspend the reform on February 13, 2007 after he had been indicted for corruption, charged with misappropriating his expenses while he was mayor of Taipei from 1998 to 2006. He was tried and finally exonerated by the Supreme Court shortly after he had been elected. He wants to be vindicated, suing for perjury the public prosecutor who indicted him. He claimed Hou Kuan-jen changed the statements by witnesses in order to prosecute him. The Taipei district court is considering Ma's appeal for trying Hou without indictment, and the president told the official Central News Agency in another exclusive interview he is suing Hou as Citizen Ma Ying-jeou, because the case had been initiated long before he was elected president. But the real purpose in his doubling as the chairman is to make all Kuomintang lawmakers toe his new party line to improve the track record of his government in order to pave the way for Ma's reelection in 2012. It doesn't please all 81 legislators of the ruling party. Many of them fear he may become a “new strongman” in the image of his one-time mentor President Chiang Ching-kuo. That's why he had to declare in the CommonWealth interview the days of a strongman are over. He denied he would be a strongman but had to admit the lawmakers and the party that controls them by means of nomination for reelection would have to work closely together with the administration, using as the platform its central standing committee under his personal leadership. It's easier said than done. Contentious legislators won't meekly submit. Those bad, old days of a subservient parliament and an autocratic party are over, too. They are not lemmings following their leader in jumping off the cliff into the Arctic Ocean. On the other hand, it was totally unnecessary for President Ma to deny this and give any explanations. For all the lawmakers and party apparatchiks know full well he cannot be an autocratic president cum chairman, even if he tries. All this has prompted Fredrick Chien, a former speaker of the now defunct National Assembly and president of the Control Yuan, to warn Ma against doubling as chairman of the Kuomintang. “If Mr. Ma asked me, I would tell him not to take the concurrent job of party chairman,” said Chien, who at one time taught a student called Ma Ying-jeou. |
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