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Pro-China Veteran’s Taiwan Election Bid Deals Blow to Beijing

Pro-China Veteran’s Taiwan Election Bid Deals Blow to Beijing

(Bloomberg) -- A veteran China-friendly politician joined the race for Taiwan’s presidency in a potential blow to Beijing, ramping up the pressure on its preferred candidate as he struggles to reinvigorate a flagging campaign to unseat President Tsai Ing-wen.

People First Party Chairman James Soong announced that he plans to make a fourth bid for Taiwan’s presidency at a briefing in Taipei on Wednesday. A Soong campaign would likely hurt the chances of the Kuomintang’s candidate, Han Kuo-yu, since he and Soong both draw support from voters who favor eventual unification with China.

Pro-China Veteran’s Taiwan Election Bid Deals Blow to Beijing

Soong’s party opposes formal independence for Taiwan, espousing a gradual process of rapprochement between the two sides of the strait that deparate the democratically run island from the mainland ending in “political integration.” Tsai’s Democratic Progressive Party is pro-independence.

Parties have until Monday to nominate candidates for the Jan. 11 election.

Local Figure

Soong was born in the southern Chinese province of Hunan in 1942 before his family fled to Taiwan seven years later alongside the retreating General Chiang Kai-shek. A well-known figure in local politics in the 1980s and 1990s, Soong has contested and lost three previous bids for Taiwan’s presidency since 2000. In his most recent attempt in 2016, he garnered almost 13% of the vote.

Around 8% of voters support Soong for president, according to a poll by the Apple Daily newspaper on Monday. Tsai continues to lead the KMT’s Han by around 15 percentage points.

Soong may think this is his year “given Han’s waning popularity,” said Shelley Rigger, professor of political science at Davidson College. “At a minimum, having a standard bearer in the presidential race would give his People First Party more visibility for the legislative party list race.”

Soong aims to rally support for lawmakers of his party in a legislative election that will be held concurrently with the presidential vote. The PFP currently has three legislators in the 113-member assembly.

--With assistance from Adrian Kennedy.

To contact the reporter on this story: Samson Ellis in Taipei at sellis29@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: John Liu at jliu42@bloomberg.net, Karen Leigh, Brendan Scott

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