For those pursuing politics as a career, being a member of a political family can help a lot. In many cases, a political career is predestined by birth or by marriage into such a family.
This is exactly how a number of sitting legislators have come to their positions today. Among them are members of the second and third generations of political families, as well as the spouses of family members.
A typical example is the Kaohsiung County-based Yu family. This DPP-affiliated family now has two members in the legislature: Yu Jane-daw (
TAIPEI TIMES FILE PHOTO
The family, which gained political sway when Yu Teng-fa (
During this period, Huang Yu-jen (
Extending their influence beyond Kaohsiung County, members of the family have taken turns running for a seat on the Taiwan Provincial Assembly and Legislative Yuan. Before Yu Jane-daw, who is now in his second term, Yu-Chen Yueh-ying, Yu Cheng-hsien and his sister Yu Lin-ya (
While the Yu family's tradition runs back several generation, many young members of the Legislative Yuan are also carrying on where their parents left off.
Three-term DPP Legislator Wang Hsueh-fung (王雪峰), daughter of retired five-term Taipei City Council deputy Wang Kun-ho (王昆和), first came into contact with politics when she was in primary school around 30 years ago.
"When I was in fourth grade, I stumped for my father on his campaign truck," the former lawyer said.
Wang joined the democracy movement while in college in the late 1980s. But it was not until 1992, when at age 28 she was elected a National Assembly deputy, that her political career took off. Three years later she won her first term as a legislator.
Chen Chi-mai (
"Influenced by my father, I ran for legislator after finishing graduate school and took to a political path," the 38-year-old legislator recalled.
His father, Chen Che-nan (陳哲男) deputy secretary-general of the Presidential Office, held a seat in the legislature for three terms until 1994.
In many cases, however, children of a political family have no alternative but to follow their parents' profession.
Two-term KMT Legislator Lin Yi-shih (
According to the 34-year-old legislator, he, unlike other candidates, was under extremely heavy pressure to win so as not to "disgrace" his family.
A politician for 40 years who served four terms as a deputy in the Kaohsiung County Council and another four terms as a deputy in the Taiwan Provincial Assembly, Lin Hsien-pao was leader of a local political faction in Kao-hsiung County.
Another case is Chiu Yi-ying (邱議瑩), a 31-year-old freshman legislator also from the DPP, who is daughter of former Taiwan Provincial Assembly deputy and democracy activist Chiu Mao-nan (
According to Chiu Yi-ying, her father had planned for her political bid since she was a little girl.
"I already knew when I was little that I would enter politics one day," Chiu said.
Chiu Yi-ying joined her father's campaign team in 1994, which paved the way for her first election campaign -- the 1996 National Assembly elections. In the end she was elected with the most votes in her Pingtung County constituency.
After becoming the youngest member of the DPP's Central Standing Committee in 1998, she enjoyed further success in December last year, winning a seat in the legislature.
There are other legislators who have entered politics by chance, thanks to the contacts and resources their parents established in the political scene.
The KMT's Wang Yu-ting (王昱婷) was only 25 when she was first elected a legislator in 1998. Wang, who is now in her second term, said she never intended to become a politician, having watched how her father sacrificed time with the family to perform his duty as a representative of the people.
But she was nominated as a legislative candidate by the KMT for a seat reserved for women in her constituency in Tainan City.
Another example is the DPP's Lin Tai-hua (
She was notified 15 minutes before the registration deadline that she was to represent the DPP for a seat reserved for women in Kaohsiung County in last year's legislative elections. And she succeeded.
"My candidacy was totally accidental," Lin said.
While support and resources from the family can help legislators win seats, they frequently have to work hard to prove that they are up to the job.
Senior KMT Legislator Hwang Chao-shun (黃昭順), daughter of late Control Yuan President Hwang Tzuen-chiou (黃尊秋), seems to have overcome this problem in the 22 years since she first stepped onto the political scene as a deputy in the Kaohsiung City Council.
According to Hwang, having an influential father did not guarantee that she would survive the test of voters.
"People won't vote for a politician because he has an influential family background. He will still suffer defeat if his service wins little approval from the people," Hwang said.
Likewise, the DPP's Lan Mei-chin (藍美津), who was elected a legislator last year after serving four terms as a deputy to Taipei City Council, was better known as wife of former democracy activist Huang Tien-fu (黃天福), or sister-in-law of late DPP chairman Huang Hsin-chieh (黃信介), when her political career began in 1985.
Victory in re-election bids over the years and her successful advance into the legislature indicate that there is public approval for her that goes beyond her family background.
"With my credentials in the Taipei City Council and service for my constituents, I've pried open a road belonging to myself," Lan said.
Three batches of banana sauce imported from the Philippines were intercepted at the border after they were found to contain the banned industrial dye Orange G, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said yesterday. From today through Sept. 2 next year, all seasoning sauces from the Philippines are to be subject to the FDA’s strictest border inspection, meaning 100 percent testing for illegal dyes before entry is allowed, it said in a statement. Orange G is an industrial coloring agent that is not permitted for food use in Taiwan or internationally, said Cheng Wei-chih (鄭維智), head of the FDA’s Northern Center for
The Chinese military has built landing bridge ships designed to expand its amphibious options for a potential assault on Taiwan, but their combat effectiveness is limited due to their high vulnerability, a defense expert said in an analysis published on Monday. Shen Ming-shih (沈明室), a research fellow at the Institute for National Defense and Security Research, said that the deployment of such vessels as part of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy’s East Sea Fleet signals a strong focus on Taiwan. However, the ships are highly vulnerable to precision strikes, which means they could be destroyed before they achieve their intended
LOOKING NORTH: The base would enhance the military’s awareness of activities in the Bashi Channel, which China Coast Guard ships have been frequenting, an expert said The Philippine Navy on Thursday last week inaugurated a forward operating base in the country’s northern most province of Batanes, which at 185km from Taiwan would be strategically important in a military conflict in the Taiwan Strait. The Philippine Daily Inquirer quoted Northern Luzon Command Commander Lieutenant General Fernyl Buca as saying that the base in Mahatao would bolster the country’s northern defenses and response capabilities. The base is also a response to the “irregular presence this month of armed” of China Coast Guard vessels frequenting the Bashi Channel in the Luzon Strait just south of Taiwan, the paper reported, citing a
UNDER PRESSURE: The report cited numerous events that have happened this year to show increased coercion from China, such as military drills and legal threats The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) aims to reinforce its “one China” principle and the idea that Taiwan belongs to the People’s Republic of China by hosting celebratory events this year for the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, the “retrocession” of Taiwan and the establishment of the UN, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said in its latest report to the Legislative Yuan. Taking advantage of the significant anniversaries, Chinese officials are attempting to assert China’s sovereignty over Taiwan through interviews with international news media and cross-strait exchange events, the report said. Beijing intends to reinforce its “one China” principle