The Central Election Commission (CEC) reportedly plans to file a lawsuit to invalidate the election of Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) Legislator-at-large Li Zhenxiu (李貞秀) on the grounds that Li was ineligible to run for office under cross-strait law, a source said yesterday.
Li, who was sworn into office last month, was born in China, but has been living in Taiwan for more than 30 years and holds a Taiwanese passport.
However, there is disagreement as to whether she is eligible to serve, as she has not provided recognized proof of renouncing her Chinese citizenship and might have submitted proof of renouncing her Chinese household registration too late to register as a candidate.
Photo: Liao Chen-huei, Taipei Times
Before a 2004 amendment to the Act Governing Relations Between the People of the Taiwan Area and the Mainland Area (臺灣地區與大陸地區人民關係條例), spouses from China were required to submit proof that they had given up their Chinese residency within six months of the amendment’s promulgation, a source familiar with cross-strait law said on condition of anonymity.
However, Li had no record of submitting the document to the National Immigration Agency or the Straits Exchange Foundation before March last year, the source said.
Citing Article 21 of the act, the source said that naturalized Chinese spouses are only eligible to run for government office 10 years after they obtain Taiwanese citizenship.
The 10-year period begins after they submit proof of renouncing their Chinese residency, they said.
Li did not qualify to run in 2023, as she did not submit her papers before then, despite having been married to a Taiwanese since 1999, the source said.
The CEC at the time could not verify Li’s lack of qualification as it had only reviewed her national identification card and household registration data, they said.
However, household registration data do not state when the person renounced their Chinese citizenship, they added.
The government has also questioned whether Li is eligible to serve, given that the Nationality Act (國籍法) stipulates those who hold other nationalities are barred from holding public office.
The CEC yesterday said that it would resolve the Li case after a full committee can be convened.
The committee has only four sitting members, as the tenures of six members expired in November last year.
By law, at least five members are required to convene a session and the legislature has not yet ratified seven candidates proposed by the Executive Yuan.
If the committee believes Li’s election was invalid, it could not revoke Li’s status, but must file a lawsuit to invalidate her election.
TPP caucus director Vicky Chen (陳智菡) said that the issue highlights government officials’ ignorance of the law.
The Republic of China “does not recognize” the People’s Republic of China, she said, citing the Constitution.
Regulations on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are the same: If a person’s residency is to be annulled, their national identity papers, as well as their passport, would also be nullified, she said.
There could not be an issue of “dual citizenship,” she added.
Additional reporting by Chen Chih-cheng
CHAOS: Iranians took to the streets playing celebratory music after reports of Khamenei’s death on Saturday, while mourners also gathered in Tehran yesterday Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in a major attack on Iran launched by Israel and the US, throwing the future of the Islamic republic into doubt and raising the risk of regional instability. Iranian state television and the state-run IRNA news agency announced the 86-year-old’s death early yesterday. US President Donald Trump said it gave Iranians their “greatest chance” to “take back” their country. The announcements came after a joint US and Israeli aerial bombardment that targeted Iranian military and governmental sites. Trump said the “heavy and pinpoint bombing” would continue through the week or as long
TRUST: The KMT said it respected the US’ timing and considerations, and hoped it would continue to honor its commitments to helping Taiwan bolster its defenses and deterrence US President Donald Trump is delaying a multibillion-dollar arms sale to Taiwan to ensure his visit to Beijing is successful, a New York Times report said. The weapons sales package has stalled in the US Department of State, the report said, citing US officials it did not identify. The White House has told agencies not to push forward ahead of Trump’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), it said. The two last month held a phone call to discuss trade and geopolitical flashpoints ahead of the summit. Xi raised the Taiwan issue and urged the US to handle arms sales to
BIG SPENDERS: Foreign investors bought the most Taiwan equities since 2005, signaling confidence that an AI boom would continue to benefit chipmakers Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co’s (TSMC, 台積電) market capitalization swelled to US$2 trillion for the first time following a 4.25 percent rally in its American depositary receipts (ADR) overnight, putting the world’s biggest contract chipmaker sixth on the list of the world’s biggest companies by market capitalization, just behind Amazon.com Inc. The site CompaniesMarketcap.com ranked TSMC ahead of Saudi Aramco and Meta Platforms Inc. The Taiwanese company’s ADRs on Tuesday surged to US$385.75 on the New York Stock Exchange, as strong demand for artificial intelligence (AI) applications led to chip supply constraints and boost revenue growth to record-breaking levels. Each TSMC ADR represents
State-run CPC Corp, Taiwan (CPC, 台灣中油) yesterday said that it had confirmed on Saturday night with its liquefied natural gas (LNG) and crude oil suppliers that shipments are proceeding as scheduled and that domestic supplies remain unaffected. The CPC yesterday announced the gasoline and diesel prices will rise by NT$0.2 and NT$0.4 per liter, respectively, starting Monday, citing Middle East tensions and blizzards in the eastern United States. CPC also iterated it has been reducing the proportion of crude oil imports from the Middle East and diversifying its supply sources in the past few years in response to geopolitical risks, expanding