A KMT subgroup in the Legislative Yuan said yesterday the party should field its own presidential and vice presidential candidates -- instead of teaming up with the PFP.
The e-Generation Alliance was responding to media reports that, after extensive consultations between senior KMT and PFP heavyweights, KMT Chairman Lien Chan (連戰) would team up with his PFP counterpart James Soong (宋楚瑜) to run in the 2004 presidential election.
Legislator Shyh Jong-shyong (
"As the largest opposition party in the legislature, the KMT should field its own ticket instead of teaming up with other parties," Shyh said.
Shyh said that the KMT should face up to reality and field its own ticket for the next presidential election.
In his view, Shyh said Lien could team up with Legislative Yuan Speaker Wang Jin-pyng (
Legislator Chen Hung-chang, who serves as deputy chief of the e-Generation Alliance, echoed Shyh's view, saying that the KMT should either field a Lien-Wang or Wang-Ma ticket and come up with innovative policy proposals to win the hearts and minds of voters.
"The KMT cooperated with the PFP in last December's legislative elections, but the KMT suffered a major setback because of it," Chen recalled. "We should not forget that lesson."
Chen said the proposal that the KMT and the PFP cooperate in the next presidential election is distasteful. "I'm afraid the domestic political scene would be even more chaotic if a joint KMT-PFP ticket won the presidency," he said.
The US House of Representatives yesterday passed the PROTECT Taiwan Act, which stipulates that Washington would exclude China from participating in major global financial organizations if its actions directly threaten Taiwan’s security. The bill, proposed by Republican US Representative Frank Lucas, passed with 395 votes in favor and two against. It stipulates that if China’s actions pose any threat to Taiwan’s security, economic or social systems, the US would, “to the maximum extent practicable,” exclude China from international financial institutions, including the G20, the Bank for International Settlements and the Financial Stability Board. The bill makes it clear that China
Garbage and recycling schedules are to vary from Saturday through Sunday next week over the Lunar New Year holiday period. The following collection information is from the governments of the six special municipalities. Taipei Regular service: Sunday to Monday next week. No service: Tuesday to Thursday next week. Extra service: Friday next week. Regular service resumes: Saturday next week. New Taipei City Extra service: Sunday. Adjusted collection time: Monday next week — garbage collection is to begin in the morning and end at 6pm. No service: Tuesday to Thursday next week. Regular service resumes: Friday next week. Note: Garbage can be dropped off at 70
A KFC branch in Kaohsiung may be fined between NT$60,000 and NT$200 million (US$1,907 and US$6.37 million), after a customer yesterday found an entire AAA battery inside an egg tart, the Kaohsiung Department of Health said today. The customer was about to microwave a box of egg tarts they had bought at the fast-food restaurant’s Nanzih (楠梓) branch when they checked the bottom and saw a dark shadow inside one of them, they said in a Threads post. The customer filmed themself taking the egg tart apart to reveal an entire AAA battery inside, which apparently showed signs of damage. Surveillance footage showed
GROUP EFFORT: The number of inbound travelers rose 11 to 12 percent last month, with a significant increase in tourists from Europe and North America, an official said The government aims to attract 9.4 million visitors this year, the Tourism Administration said yesterday, citing last year’s success in diversifying tourist markets. Taiwan last year drew about 8.57 million international arrivals, 72.3 percent of pre-COVID-19 levels. By contrast, the nation had about 18.94 million outbound tourists last year, surpassing the pre-COVID-19 level of 17.1 million. The estimated tourism revenue deficit was about NT$700.9 billion (US$22.22 billion). Taoyuan International Airport Corp expects more than 160,000 passengers to pass through the nation’s largest airport daily during the Lunar New Year holiday, which begins on Saturday. As of Jan. 30, the nation’s average hotel occupancy rate