While Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Lien Chan (連戰) and People First Party (PFP) Chairman James Soong (宋楚瑜) persist in their campaigns to uncover the "truth" of the March 19 assassination attempt and boycott the proposed NT$610.8 billion (US$18.6 billion) US arms deal, pan-blue candidates in the south are adopting a low-key attitude toward these disputes, and are fighting their battles mostly on their own.
The party affiliations of candidates in the Taipei metropolitan area are quite clear, and voters are choosing their candidates based mostly on their party preference.
But in the south, where the candidates rely heavily on vote captains (
"We are running more like independent candidates than KMT candidates," an aide to a heavyweight KMT lawmaker in the Tainan area said.
Many KMT candidates in the south have chosen not to emphasize their party affiliations and are reducing the visibility of the KMT emblem on their campaign brochures and materials.
Red, White and Blue
KMT Legislator Lee Chuan-chiao (
Many KMT lawmakers also avoid highlighting issues such as the March 19 assassination attempt or the arms budget, pre-senting a more neutral image in their campaigns.
One KMT candidate in Chiayi County, Ho Ching-wen (
"The pan-blue candidates are afraid of talking about these controversial issues in Tainan," said Lai Ching-te (
Lai hinted that these issues are not beneficial to the pan-blues' campaign efforts.
Tainan Mayor Hsu Tain-tsair (
"The more the pan-blues dispute the different issues, the more united the pan-greens become," Hsu said.
Meanwhile, a KMT candidate in the south said that the pan-blue camp should have focused on regulating the number of nominations in the south, instead of arguing over the shooting probe and arms deal.
Lin Nan-shen (林南生), a KMT candidate in Tainan City, is a good example of how frantically southern candidates want to distance themselves from the dis-putes promoted by KMT headquarters.
Lin, who has found his main support base among veteran soldiers, is facing a serious challenge from PFP candidate Kao Si-po (
But Lin is also working hard to separate himself from the pan-blue hardliners, despite his apparent hardliner background, and is stressing that he embraces localization.
He said that he had been following the party's guidelines on the nation's status, although his personal principles led him to believe that unification and independence should be abandoned.
"I did not agree with what [PFP Legislator] Chiu Yi (
"I tentatively acknowledge A-bian [President Chen Shui-bian (
Lin said that the proposed arms procurement is necessary, but the price is too high, and that this has received a good response from veteran soldiers in general.
Grassroots Voters
Lee, who has avoided both the presidential election dispute and the arms deal, said that the grassroots voters did not care about these political disputes at all.
Instead, Lee said, they care mainly about what the candidates could contribute to the local development.
"It is useless to talk about these political disputes with my constituents. If a candidate wants to talk about the political disputes with my constituents, the constituents would tell him to shut up and ask him what he has done and what he will do for the constituency," Lee said.
Nonetheless, both Lin and Lee have noted that some of their vote captains or relatives who voted for Chen in the presidential election are coming back to the pan-blue camp because of personal or social reasons.
Lin said that a cousin of his who is a member of the Presbyterian Church -- which has always been a loyal DPP and Taiwan independence supporter -- had voted for Chen, but was now helping him with his legislative election campaign.
"Many of my vote captains supported A-bian in the presidential election because he is from Tainan County, but now they are supporting me again in the legislative election because I am from the area," Lee said.
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