Having long enjoyed courteous treatment from the pan-blue camp, independent Legislator Sisy Chen (陳文茜) fell from grace this past week, becoming a target for blue-camp lawmakers.
Believing that her baseless allegations at the March 19 press conference with regard to the assassination attempt on President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) and Vice President Annette Lu (呂秀蓮) had provoked resentment among undecided voters and shifted support to Chen Shui-bian, a number of Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislators said Sisy Chen ought to be held responsible for the KMT-People First Party (PFP) alliance's defeat in last month's presidential election.
TAIPEI TIMES FILE PHOTO
Chen Shui-bian and Lu defeated the ticket of KMT Chairman Lien Chan (連戰) and PFP Chairman James Soong (宋楚瑜) by a razor-thin margin.
Lien has refused to concede defeat in the election and claimed, although lacking evidence, voting irregularities. The blue camp has filed lawsuits demanding a recount and seeking to declare the election a fraud.
Via TV and radio programs, Sisy Chen defended herself, saying her allegations were based on information provided by the alliance and that Lien, Soong and a number of key campaign figures knew what she was going to say at the press conference beforehand.
Although the KMT's criticism of Sisy Chen appeared to have come to a halt since Lien urged an end to finger-pointing, the brouhaha nonetheless shed light on Chen's intriguing relationship with the blue camp.
Known for her witty, sarcastic speeches and eloquence, the 46-year-old Chen had generally been regarded as a "bright and talented female" in Taiwan's political arena.
But given her bold and resolute manner, she projected a controversial image in the eyes of the public.
A Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) publicity chief from 1995 to 1998, Sisy Chen defected from the DPP after the 2000 presidential election. She has since become one of the fiercest critics of Chen Shui-bian and her former party.
Since her election in December 2001 as an independent legislator, she has sided with the pan-blue camp on a number of issues and was a driving force behind the pan-blue camp's publicity machine during this year's presidential campaign.
Although the upper echelons of the alliance appreciated and relied on her contributions to battling the DPP, her lack of official title or position within the camp generated resentment. Members of the alliance grumbled that she had too much influence and that she meddled in the blue camp's affairs.
Sisy Chen defended her role, saying she did not want "to get too involved" with either the KMT or the PFP and that she was helping out merely as a friend.
Her remarks at the March 19 press conference showed the level to which she was involved in the alliance's campaign affairs and her contacts with pan-blue leaders.
"It turned out that the more Sisy Chen talked [about her involvement with the alliance], the more clear it became to us how close she had been with the core of the party leaders," KMT Legislator Hsu Shu-poh (許舒博) said.
One reason why the KMT welcomed Sisy Chen's input was that she introduced new ways of thinking that the 109-year-old KMT seemed to lack, said veteran media figure Yang Hsien-hung (楊憲宏).
"It has been the KMT's longtime practice that subordinates do as they are told," Yang said. "Sisy Chen's joining the team brought in multi-faceted views and ideas to the KMT's otherwise rather systematic way of thinking."
An obdurate critic of Chen Shui-bian, Sisy Chen's skillfulness in media strategy as well as her former ties to the DPP gave Lien and Soong confidence in her, Yang said.
Terming Sisy Chen's relationship with the KMT and the PFP as "one of mutual interest," Yang described Sisy Chen as skillful at politics and public relations.
She "knows what power is and how to manipulate power," Yang said.
TV host Clara Chou (周玉蔻) compared Sisy Chen to the Empress Dowager Tzu-hsi (慈禧太后) of the Manchu Dynasty, who manipulated the 5-year-old Emperor Te Tsong (德宗) like a puppet.
"Sisy Chen is not a mere guest adviser [to the pan-blue camp], but is one like the Empress Dowager Tzu-hsi, who administered affairs from behind the scenes," Chou said.
Yang added that, "We should feel relieved that Lien was not elected, for otherwise one would be left to wonder based on whose orders and opinions the country is being run."
Sisy Chen has also been criticized for acting as both a legislator and a talk-show host.
She hosts a radio talk show as well as a nationwide TV political commentary program on a KMT-affiliated station.
Despite her declaration that she would withdraw from the media if DPP Legislator Trong Chai (
Saying that the public's long-held suspicions about Sisy Chen's dual roles in politics and the media were proven valid in her recent remarks, DPP Legislator Luo Wen-chia (羅文嘉) said, "All was far more serious than the public had imagined."
"If politicians do not know how to conduct themselves, we have to resort to laws and regulations to eliminate and preclude such events from happening," Luo said, adding that it is his aim to push for an amendment to the Broadcasting and Television Law (廣電法) to make it illegal for politicians to double as media hosts.
A group of Taiwanese-American and Tibetan-American students at Harvard University on Saturday disrupted Chinese Ambassador to the US Xie Feng’s (謝鋒) speech at the school, accusing him of being responsible for numerous human rights violations. Four students — two Taiwanese Americans and two from Tibet — held up banners inside a conference hall where Xie was delivering a speech at the opening ceremony of the Harvard Kennedy School China Conference 2024. In a video clip provided by the Coalition of Students Resisting the CCP (Chinese Communist Party), Taiwanese-American Cosette Wu (吳亭樺) and Tibetan-American Tsering Yangchen are seen holding banners that together read:
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