News

Antagonistic political rhetoric has fueled the pro-China conspiracy theory that the recall campaign was a means to ...
On July 26, Taiwanese citizens went to the polls and voted on whether to recall 24 of their 113 representatives—or 21 percent ...
A historic vote in Taiwan on Saturday targeting 24 opposition Kuomintang (KMT) legislators accused of being too friendly with ...
Taiwan’s leader Lai Ching-te suffered a string of high-profile political setbacks over the past week, wounding his presidency ...
Taiwanese voters have rejected a bid to oust about one-fifth of their lawmakers from the opposition Nationalist Party in a ...
In this week’s episode of China Insider, Miles Yu reviews the latest report from Hudson Institute’s China Center, China after ...
As Taiwan grapples with a heated recall campaign, China expresses support for protests, escalating political tensions across ...
The failure of the recalls does not reflect a re-evaluation of cross-strait policy preferences. But it does send a clear ...
The "Great Recall" of over two dozen opposition lawmakers in Taiwan was a great disappointment for the president and his progressive supporters.
Policy Asia Taiwan's hot political summer: KMT lawmakers face wave of recall votes Campaigners aiming to oust opposition incumbents say effort is 'last line of defense' ...
An unprecedented move backed by Taiwan President Lai Ching-te to unseat more than a quarter of the island’s legislators was overwhelmingly rejected during the first of two “recall” elections.
For the Taiwan recall vote to pass, more than a quarter of eligible voters in the electoral district must vote in favor, and the total number of supporters must exceed those opposed.