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China-Friendly Billionaire Adds to Taiwan Leader's Election Woes

Billionaire Terry Gou’s possible entry into Taiwan’s presidential race creates a dilemma for the island’s leader Tsai Ing-wen.

China-Friendly Billionaire Adds to Taiwan Leader's Election Woes
Terry Gou, chairman of Foxconn Technology Group (Photographer: Buddhika Weerasinghe/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Billionaire Terry Gou’s possible entry into Taiwan’s presidential race on the Kuomintang line illustrates the dilemma facing the island’s leader, Tsai Ing-wen, as she prepares for an uphill re-election bid.

On one side, Tsai must contend with a resurgent KMT, advocating closer ties with China and eager to regain power after three years in the opposition. On the other, she’s battling a nomination fight within her own Democratic Progressive Party, where her pro-independence base is pushing for a cleaner break from the mainland.

China-Friendly Billionaire Adds to Taiwan Leader's Election Woes

Gou’s potential challenge, which the Foxconn Technology Group founder said Tuesday he was considering, represents the broader problem for Tsai. A series of tough policy fights and an isolation campaign by China have pushed support for her reelection into the teens in some public opinion surveys and encouraged several would-be contenders from among the more China-friendly “pan-blue” camp.

Gou, who says he would run on the KMT line, was one of the first Taiwanese business leaders to take advantage of cheaper wages and land costs on the mainland, becoming Apple Inc.’s top iPhone assembler. His resources -- including a fortune worth $4.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index -- could pose a formidable challenge to Tsai.

Gou has a pair events planned for Wednesday -- including a visit to a temple near his childhood home in the Taipei suburbs at 10:30 a.m. local time -- that will be closely watched for details on his intentions. He is set to visit another temple at 11:30 a.m.

‘Independence Worker’

But first, the Taiwanese president must survive a primary challenge from her former premier, William Lai Ching-te, a self-described “independence worker” who has pledged a firmer push-back against China. That’s forced Tsai to shore up her base, cracking down on mainland investments, visitors and other potential sources of political influence.

“Tsai is caught in between,” said Chang Ling-chen, an emeritus political science professor at the National Taiwan University. “She is not only having to fight for party support in the primary, but will also face a contest from the pan-blue group.”

One possible solution for Tsai would be to convince Lai to join as her vice presidential running mate. But polls show him running more competitively against possible KMT candidates than Tsai and the DPP has delayed its primary until at least late May to allow more time for negotiations.

In the meantime, Tsai’s government has raised the top fine for illegal mainland investments to NT$25 million ($800,000) from NT$600,000 previously and removed a communications regulator accused of failing to clamp down on false reports benefiting China. Earlier this month, Taiwan deported a mainland academic Li Yi after he tried to deliver a speech on unification while on a visit to the island.

Chinese ‘Coercion’

She’s also held a series of events with China hawks in the U.S., in which she’s sounded the alarm about Communist Party “coercion” and urged greater military support from Washington. The race comes against the backdrop of increased pressure from Beijing, with President Xi Jinping suggesting earlier this year that mainland China and Taiwan should enter into “in-depth democratic consultations” on unification.

“The scrutiny has always been there, as the DPP is wary of China’s influence on Taiwan society and politics,” said Yuan-kang Wang, a professor of political science at Western Michigan University. “The upcoming elections might have created some sense of urgency in curbing Chinese influence.”

Although China and Taiwan have been ruled separately since the late 1940s, Beijing has said any moves by Taiwan to formalize its status as a sovereign state would be grounds for invasion. Tsai has so far avoided actions that might provoke the Communist Party, frustrating some within her party.

The risk for Tsai is moving so far toward her base that she cedes the middle to a KMT challenger. Besides Gou, former New Taipei Mayor Eric Chu and former legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng have announced their candidacies. Han Kuo-yu and Ko Wen-je, the outspoken mayors of Kaohsiung and Taipei, respectively, also haven’t ruled out a run either.

Stronger Ties

Improving China ties has been a unifying theme among the pan-blue contenders. Han has described China and the island as two partners in an “arranged marriage” who had fallen “madly in love” and said that peace talks were “inevitable” between the democratically run Taiwan and the Communist Party-ruled mainland.

Gou’s personal story as the child of mainland emigres who made a fortune in China echos Taiwan’s own economic dependence on the much larger economy next door. That might appeal to Taiwanese voters. Public opinion polls show they favor continuing the island’s ambiguous status without immediate independence or unification.

“Like other Kuomintang candidates, Gou also supports Taiwan’s economic links with China,” said Austin Wang, a political scientist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. “Where he differs from other party rivals is that he has business experience.”

--With assistance from Debby Wu.

To contact the reporters on this story: Karen Leigh in Hong Kong at kleigh4@bloomberg.net;Adela Lin in Taipei at alin95@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Chris Kay

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