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Why is the media ignoring the anti nuclear success in Taiwan’s election landslide?

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Many articles on the Net today, about the dramatic win in Taiwan’s elections, for Ing-wen Tsai and her DPP Party .  But why so far nary a mention of the role of her anti nuclear stance in that election. ?

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flag-TaiwanIndependence-minded opposition wins Taiwan electionIrish Times, 17 Jan 16 

“…….“Regardless of how you voted, the exercise of democratic expression was the most important meaning of this election,” Ms Tsai said in a news conference.

Ms Tsai unseated Ma Ying-jeou of the Kuomintang (KMT) nationalist party, which has ruled the island of 23 million people since “Generalissimo” Chiang Kai-shek fled there in 1949, with the exception of 2000-2008 when the DPP were in charge.

The DPP win was by a landslide margin. According to the China News Agency, Ms Tsai won the presidency with 56.1 per cent of the vote. The DPP also took control of the Executive Yuan parliament for the first time, taking 68 of the 113 seats compared to the KMT’s 35 seats…….http://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/asia-pacific/independence-minded-opposition-wins-taiwan-election-1.2499792

Taiwan election points to nuclear phase-out by 20231, Climate Home,  14/01/2016, 
Ing-wen Tsai, who leads the presidential polls, envisions a ‘nuclear-free homeland’ with a bigger role for energy efficiency and renewables
By Megan Darby

Taiwan is facing a phase-out of atomic power, with nuclear sceptic Ing-wen Tsai tipped to win a presidential election on Saturday.

The island state’s three operating nuclear plants are due for retirement by 2023. A fourth, 90% built, was mothballed last year in response to protests from a public spooked by Japan’s Fukushima disaster.

Opinion polls predict a landslide victory for Tsai, with her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) in with a chance of its first ever parliamentary majority……

Setting out her green energy platform in September, Tsai predicted NT$1 trillion (US$30 billion) of investment in the renewables sector.

“The time is ripe for Taiwan’s green energy development — what we lack is a government determined to see it through,” she said in remarks reported by the China Post…..

Tze-Luen Lin, energy and climate expert at National Taiwan University, expressed confidence the emissions targets were attainable…..http://www.climatechangenews.com/2016/01/14/taiwan-election-points-to-nuclear-free-future/

January 18, 2016 - Posted by | politics, Taiwan

3 Comments »

  1. “a public spooked by Fukushima” I would change this to say, ” a public enlightened by Fukushima”

    enoughalready45's avatar Comment by enoughalready45 | January 18, 2016 | Reply

  2. I had a lady from Taiwan stay with me a monthe. She wants to get pf their badly. She says beaches there are contminated by fuku. I feel bad for her.

    Tim Curry's avatar Comment by Tim Curry | January 19, 2016 | Reply

  3. because after the Fukushima, the NGOs played the major role in anti-nuclear in Taiwan, and the DPP focused more on the national identity issue in recent years

    tsai's avatar Comment by tsai | June 29, 2016 | Reply


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