PCT comments on the results of the 2012 presidential and legislative elections

From "Taiwan Church News" <enews@pctpress.org>
Date Fri, 20 Jan 2012 16:51:27 +0800

3125 Edition

January 16-22, 2012

Headline News

PCT comments on the results of the 2012 presidential and legislative elections

Reported by Sam Lee

Written by Lydia Ma

After the results of Taiwan’s presidential and legislative elections on January 
14 were unveiled, PCT General Assembly convened a meeting and created an 
Election Response Committee. At this meeting, General Assembly Moderator Rev. 
Chiohh Lyiam-syian said that though the outcome of this election was a 
disappointment for the PCT, the church would continue to stand in solidarity 
with Taiwanese people and monitor the Ma administration’s policies, especially 
its overly China-leaning policies. However, he voiced concern that the outcome 
of this election may have given the international community the impression that 
Taiwan had chosen to tilt toward China. The General Assembly will issue a 
formal pastoral letter after the Lunar New Year holidays.

In last week’s election for president, the KMT ticket received 51.60% of the 
votes cast, while the DPP ticket received 45.63%. In terms of legislative 
seats, the KMT won 64 seats, the DPP won 40 seats, the TSU won 3 seats, the PFP 
won 3 seats, and another 3 seats were picked up by other parties and 
independents. One of the highlights of the legislative election was the defeat 
of Chiu Yi, a high-profile KMT legislator known for stirring controversies, who 
was replaced by his DPP opponent Chao Tien-lin, a member of San-Duo 
Presbyterian Church.

Responding to the dashed hopes of many PCT pastors and members who had hoped 
for Tsai Ing-wen to win, Chiohh encouraged them to not lose hope and to 
remember the “Three Little Pigs” movement, which must continue on. In the face 
of disappointing results, Chiohh urged to grieve without losing hope. As for 
the disparity between public opinion and the latest PCT statement issued in 
December 2011, Chiohh said that the PCT wasn’t a political organization, but a 
Christian organization. “Though we don’t understand what tests God has put 
before us, we believe that the load God has given us will not be too much for 
us to bear,” he said.

As for corporate influence and greed and other structural problems that made 
this election partly unfair, Chiohh underscored that these factors cannot 
conceal the fact that, compared to the 2008 elections, the gap between the KMT 
and the DPP has narrowed from 2.2 million votes to 800,000 votes – a 
significant feat. The PCT must continue to stand in solidarity with Taiwanese 
and move on and move forward.

Chiohh advised that more attention be paid to international responses in the 
aftermath of this election. He explained that, in spite of much controversy 
surrounding the ECFA agreement and the fictitious “1992 Consensus”, President 
Ma Ying-jeou’s win could give the international community the impression that 
Taiwanese have decided to form closer ties with China. Hence, after the dust 
settles and everyone has had some time to reflect during the upcoming Lunar New 
Year holidays, PCT will issue a formal statement to national and international 
Christian organizations on its take on the results of this election.

According to PCT Associate General Secretary Lyim Hong-tiong, the results of 
this election demonstrate that much work remains to be done in Taiwan, 
especially in terms of structural reform of the government. He added that the 
2012 election results reflect that fear of losing profits and the China factor 
played a major factor in determining people’s votes. Therefore, the PCT must 
not lose heart, but rather stand firm, carry on with its mission, and continue 
being a sign of hope through love and suffering.

 

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