The Cabinet is likely to name a new finance minister and a chairman of the Council of Agriculture after the National Conference on Agricultural Finance which is scheduled for Saturday, a DPP source said yesterday.
The source said that the government prefers not to take the risk of naming unsuitable persons who are not able to fully express their convictions of the administration's policies during the discussions on Saturday.
On the other hand, since the legislature will have a brief recess next week, the Cabinet can avoid complications of the designation process, the source said.
Although several persons with solid financial backgrounds have been mentioned by the media as potential finance ministers, none of them would confirm having been consulted over the issue.
In the list of possible successors to Lee Yung-san (李庸三), named by local media are Lin Tzong-yeong (林宗勇), chairman of the International Commercial Bank of China and formerly vice finance minister and chairman of the Securities and Futures Commission, and Wei Chi-lin (魏啟林), chairman of the Land Bank of China and formerly secretary-general of the Executive Yuan, and Hu Ting-wu (胡定吾), chairman of the China Development Industrial Asset Management Corp.
Former Hsinchu mayor Lin Kuang-hua (
Also see story:
Former president Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) mention of Taiwan’s official name during a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) on Wednesday was likely a deliberate political play, academics said. “As I see it, it was intentional,” National Chengchi University Graduate Institute of East Asian Studies professor Wang Hsin-hsien (王信賢) said of Ma’s initial use of the “Republic of China” (ROC) to refer to the wider concept of “the Chinese nation.” Ma quickly corrected himself, and his office later described his use of the two similar-sounding yet politically distinct terms as “purely a gaffe.” Given Ma was reading from a script, the supposed slipup
Former Czech Republic-based Taiwanese researcher Cheng Yu-chin (鄭宇欽) has been sentenced to seven years in prison on espionage-related charges, China’s Ministry of State Security announced yesterday. China said Cheng was a spy for Taiwan who “masqueraded as a professor” and that he was previously an assistant to former Cabinet secretary-general Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰). President-elect William Lai (賴清德) on Wednesday last week announced Cho would be his premier when Lai is inaugurated next month. Today is China’s “National Security Education Day.” The Chinese ministry yesterday released a video online showing arrests over the past 10 years of people alleged to be
THE HAWAII FACTOR: While a 1965 opinion said an attack on Hawaii would not trigger Article 5, the text of the treaty suggests the state is covered, the report says NATO could be drawn into a conflict in the Taiwan Strait if Chinese forces attacked the US mainland or Hawaii, a NATO Defense College report published on Monday says. The report, written by James Lee, an assistant research fellow at Academia Sinica’s Institute of European and American Studies, states that under certain conditions a Taiwan contingency could trigger Article 5 of NATO, under which an attack against any member of the alliance is considered an attack against all members, necessitating a response. Article 6 of the North Atlantic Treaty specifies that an armed attack in the territory of any member in Europe,
The bodies of two individuals were recovered and three additional bodies were discovered on the Shakadang Trail (砂卡礑) in Taroko National Park, eight days after the devastating earthquake in Hualien County, search-and-rescue personnel said. The rescuers reported that they retrieved the bodies of a man and a girl, suspected to be the father and daughter from the Yu (游) family, 500m from the entrance of the trail on Wednesday. The rescue team added that despite the discovery of the two bodies on Friday last week, they had been unable to retrieve them until Wednesday due to the heavy equipment needed to lift