Contact Us: Submission #1031

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Submission Number: 1031
Submission ID: 39950
Submission UUID: 7f98515f-920c-4887-98e9-df8cf2452797
Submission URI: /content/contact-us

Created: Fri, 01/26/2024 - 17:29
Completed: Fri, 01/26/2024 - 17:29
Changed: Fri, 01/26/2024 - 17:29

Remote IP address: 146.70.111.145
Submitted by: Anonymous
Language: English

Is draft: No
Webform: Contact
Submitted to: Contact Us
RobertCof
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China Failed to Sway Taiwan’s Election. What Happens Now?
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China’s leader, Xi Jinping, has tied his country’s great power status to a singular promise: unifying the motherland with Taiwan, which the Chinese Communist Party sees as sacred, lost territory. A few weeks ago, Mr. Xi called this a “historical inevitability.”

But Taiwan’s election on Saturday, handing the presidency to a party that promotes the island’s separate identity for the third time in a row, confirmed that this boisterous democracy has moved even further away from China and its dream of unification.

After a campaign of festival-like rallies, where huge crowds shouted, danced and waved matching flags, Taiwan’s voters ignored China’s warnings that a vote for the Democratic Progressive Party was a vote for war. They made that choice anyway.

Lai Ching-te, a former doctor and the current vice president, who Beijing sees as a staunch separatist, will be Taiwan’s next leader. It’s an act of self-governed defiance that proved what many already knew: Beijing’s arm-twisting of Taiwan — economically and with military harassment at sea and in the air — has only strengthened the island’s desire to protect its de facto independence and move beyond China’s giant shadow.
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