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  Soong Chu-yu, James
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AffiliationPeople First  
 
NameJames Soong Chu-yu
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---, , Taiwan (Republic of China)
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Born March 16, 1942 (82 years)
ContributorUser 13
Last ModifedJuan Croniqueur
Sep 02, 2022 11:24am
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InfoSoong was born in Hunan Province in mainland China, the son of a career military man loyal to the Chiang family. He earned his bachelor's degree in diplomacy from National Chengchi University in 1964. He received an M.A. in political science from the University of California, Berkeley in 1967 and an M.S. in library science from the Catholic University of America in 1971. He earned a Ph.D. in political science from Georgetown University in 1974, after which Soong was invited back to Taiwan to become the then-Premier Chiang Ching-kuo's secretary.

Married to Viola Chen, Soong has a son and a daughter. His son, Soong Chen-y�an, is a United States-born businessman who holds U.S. citizenship and residency and was never required to serve in the ROC military.

Political Life
Although James Soong is of Mainlander background, he proved to be a popular politician among all ethnic groups on Taiwan, in part because he was one of the first Kuomintang (KMT) politicians to attempt to use the Taiwanese language in political and formal occasions, despite speaking it rather badly.

Early Political Career
Soong was Secretary to Premier from 1974-1977 and with Chiang's accession to the presidency, the Personal Secretary to the President from 1978-1981 and 1984-1989. He addressed the nation following the Carter administration's decision to switch diplomatic ties to the PRC on December 16, 1978 in which he gave a patriotic condemnation of the American position.

As director-general of the Government Information Office from 1979-1984, he was accused by his critics of aggressive censorship, including excessive use of libel laws and prison sentences to silence critics, and involvement in the supression of the Kaohsiung Incident. Soong received widespread disapproval for revoking the press licence of Tina Chou of the Associated Press for her violation of the GIO's orders to refrain from publishing autopsy results of a professor killed on the National Taiwan University campus. Soong's supporters point out that it was under Soong (later as governor) that censorship was greatly relaxed as were limits on the use of Taiwanese in the electronic media.

Soong was KMT Secretary-General from 1989 to 1993. Despite his Mainland origins, Soong was widely seen as a loyal supporter of Lee Teng-hui and opponent of the New Kuomintang Alliance and the New Party. Tn support of Soong, Lee coined the term "New Taiwanese" to describe a person born in mainland China, raised in Taiwan, who calls Taiwan home.

Governorship
He was appointed Governor of Taiwan Province in 1993 and in 1994, became first and only directly elected Governor of Taiwan. He was widely preceived to be a excellent campaigner and his excellent showing in the governorship ended hopes by the DPP of a Yeltsin effect, by which an elected governor would have more legitimacy than the national government.

His position was eliminated in 1998 following a National Development Council meeting in 1996, when it suggested the federal structure of the Republic of China government to be streamlined. Some believe that this was a political move done by then-president Lee Teng-hui to cut off Soong's power base, but some call it a pragmatic move to eliminate contradictory administrative territory.

2000 Presidential Elections
After losing the KMT presidential nomination to then-vice president Lien Chan, Soong ran as an independent in the 2000 Presidential elections. The KMT responded by expelling Soong and his supporters from the party. In the final months leading to the 2000 elections, the KMT, then under Lee Teng-hui's leadership, sued Soong for theft, alleging that as party Secretary-General, he stole millions of Taiwan dollars in cash intended for the family of the late President Chiang Ching-kuo and hid the money in the Chunghsing Bills Finance Co. Initially leading in the polls, Soong narrowly lost the election with 36.84% of the vote to Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party with 39.3%. Lien came in a distant third with only 23.1%. One common belief on Taiwan is that Lee Teng-hui favored the unpopular Vice President Lien Chan over the highly popular Soong in a deliberate effort to sabotage the Kuomintang and was secretly supporting Chen. Others believe Lee feared Soong would help expose the corruption in his regime, and undermine his legacy.

After losing the election, Soong and his supporters formed the People First Party (PFP), considered a spin-off from the KMT. The loss of PFP votes was a major factor in causing the KMT to swing toward Chinese reunification thereby causing the subsequent expulsion of Lee Teng-hui.

Recent Developments
Despite the personal rivalries between Lien, the KMT chairman after 2000, and Soong, the PFP chairman, the KMT and PFP have pledged to cooperate in future elections to prevent splitting the vote, as they basically share the same electorate. The KMT-PFP alliance (which is also known as the pan-blue coalition has been rocky, but has been marginally successful thus far. Though losses in the 2001 legislative elections made the DPP the largest single party in the Legislative Yuan, the pan-blue coalition holds a narrow majority over the pan-green coalition. Some believe that the PFP's lack of experienced candidates in the December 2002 mayoral elections in Taipei and Kaohsiung (the PFP supported the KMT's candidates), and the PFP's poor performance the city council elections in those cities at the same time were major setbacks to Soong's chances of being the KMT-PFP candidate for president.

In April 2003, after major discussions between KMT and PFP, Soong announced that he would run as a Vice Presidental candidate under Lien Chan in the 2004 elections. There have been widespread rumors that Soong agreed to take the Vice-Presidental post in exchange for a pledge by Lien to give him significant power including the Premiership. Many KMT members are opposed the linkage as they consider Soong an opportunist and traitor. Soong's supporters cite that he is more popular than Lien, as consistently demonstrated by polls and the results of the last presidential elections.

Prosecutors later dropped all charges against Soong in the Chunghsing scandal, but the charges tarred his image as a clean politician and contributed to his defeat. In 2003, the investigation was reopened, with former President Lee (now expelled from the KMT and the "spritual leader" of the radically pro-independence Taiwan Solidarity Union) testifying against Soong in court. However, this time, the KMT is aided Soong in his defense, and KMT Chairman Lien Chan claimed the KMT was misled into filing the lawsuit against Soong.

Political Ideology
In his campaign, Soong advocated a gradual union between Taiwan and the mainland by first signing a non-aggression pact followed by the formation of a cross-strait union similar to the European Union. His platform called for the characterization of relations between the Mainland and Taiwan as neither foreign nor domestic. Although widely seen as the candidate most friendly to Mainland China, Soong took particular effort to counter the perception that he would "sell out" Taiwan.

His base of support includes strong supporters of Chinese reunification, rural voters who were grateful for the selective economic development undertaken while he was governor, and urban middle class voters who saw him as a cleaner alternative to the KMT.

Soong has been a staunch opponent of Taiwan independence and publicly criticized President Chen for proposing a referendum, and along with Lien, has pledged to boycott it.


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  01/11/2020 ROC President Lost 4.26% (-52.88%)
  01/16/2016 ROC President Lost 12.84% (-43.29%)
  01/14/2012 ROC President Lost 2.77% (-48.83%)
  03/20/2004 ROC Vice President Lost 49.89% (-0.23%)
  03/23/2000 ROC President Lost 36.84% (-2.47%)
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