What to expect in the Taiwan elections

Photo credit: A Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) rally in Taipei on January 10. Photo by Katharin Tai.

Taiwan heads to the polls tomorrow, January 11, to vote for a president (with vice president on the same ticket) and legislature (all 113 seats).

Pundits almost universally believe that incumbent Tsai Ing-wenย (่”ก่‹ฑๆ–‡ Cร i Yฤซngwรฉn) will win a second term, and that her party, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), will retain its majority over the Kuomintang (KMT) in the Legislative Yuan.

But that doesnโ€™t mean Tsai and DPP supporters are resting easy, which is apparent if you trawl Taiwanese social media. Because Taiwan doesnโ€™t allow for absentee balloting โ€” people must vote in person at their registered precinct โ€” โ€œGo back to voteโ€ has become a common refrain. For more, see Katharin Taiโ€™s reporting from Taipei for The China Project.

So why doesnโ€™t Taiwan have online or mail-in balloting?ย โ€œWe have had discussions about introducing absentee voting before, but it never turned into a bill โ€” probably because both major parties are trying to calculate how much they can gain,โ€ says Wei-ting Yen, a professor in political science at Franklin and Marshall College.

According to official numbers, 5,328 overseas Taiwanese registered to vote in the 2020 election โ€” more than twice as many as 2016โ€™s 2,420 registered overseas voters.

We have two other stories about Taiwan on The China Project from earlier this week:

โ€œChinaโ€ or โ€œChinese Communist Partyโ€? Does the distinction matter when talking politics? Yes, say many in Taiwan. As Tsai and the DDP push back against Beijingโ€™s influence, people are wary to not let their disdain of official rhetoric turn into resentment toward mainland citizens. Nick Aspinwall has the story.

In 2016, the DDP won a majority of seatsย in the legislature for the first time ever. What can a DDP-led legislature achieve with another four years in charge? Ralph Jennings investigates.

โ€”Anthony Tao