MAKING HISTORY newly-elected Taiwan President Tsai Ing-Wen talks to the media. AFP PHOTO
MAKING HISTORY newly-elected Taiwan President Tsai Ing-Wen talks to the media. AFP PHOTO

TAIPEI: Tsai Ing-wen of Taiwan’s main opposition party will become the island’s first female president in a landslide victory over the ruling Kuomintang Saturday, as voters turned their backs on closer China ties.

KMT candidate Eric Chu conceded defeat in a disastrous rout for the party, addressing tearful crowds at the party’s headquarters in Taipei.

The vote count showed Tsai of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) securing a historic landslide victory, with around 60 percent against 30 percent for Chu.

That would be the biggest ever win for any president in Taiwan -- the previous record was 58.45 percent for current KMT president Ma Ying-jeou in 2008.

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“I’m sorry... We’ve lost. The KMT has suffered an election defeat. We haven’t worked hard enough and we failed voters’ expectations,” said KMT candidate Eric Chu addressing tearful crowds at the party’s headquarters in Taipei.

Chu also said the KMT had lost its parliamentary majority, the first time it has ever lost control of the island’s legislature.

“This is an unprecedented drastic change for the KMT,” he said.

Support for Tsai has surged as voters have become increasingly uneasy about a recent rapprochement with China under Ma, who must step down after a maximum two terms.

As the economy stagnates, many are frustrated that trade pacts signed with the mainland have failed to benefit ordinary Taiwanese.

The DPP has a much warier approach to China, although Tsai has repeatedly said she wants to maintain the “status quo.”

“We want to congratulate the DPP’s victory, this is the Taiwan people’s mandate,” Chu said.

He bowed deeply in a sign of apology and declared his resignation as chairman of the party.

Risk to China ties

Jubilant crowds gathered at the DPP headquarters in Taipei, where Tsai was due to speak later Saturday.

Vendors were selling everything from cups to key chains bearing Tsai’s image.

One small group held up a banner saying: “Taiwan is not part of China. Support Taiwan independence.”

“China has no right to claim Taiwan and we want to say that to the world,” said one member of the group, Angela Shi, who returned from San Francisco to vote.

Tsai has walked a careful path on her China strategy, but the DPP is traditionally a pro-independence party and opponents say Tsai will destabilize relations.

Ma has overseen a dramatic rapprochement with China since coming to power in 2008.

Although Taiwan is self-ruling after it split with China following a civil war in 1949, it has never declared independence and Beijing still sees it as part of its territory awaiting reunification.

The thaw culminated in a summit between Ma and Chinese President Xi Jinping in November.

Yet despite more than 20 deals and a tourist boom, closer ties have exacerbated fears that China is eroding Taiwan’s sovereignty by making it economically dependent.

Low salaries and high housing prices are also riling voters.

Beijing has warned it will not deal with any leader who does not recognize the “one China” principle, part of a tacit agreement between Beijing and the KMT known as the “1992 consensus.”

AFP