Posted on 03/21/2004 10:08:36 AM PST by pttttt
Edited on 07/12/2004 4:14:10 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
One of America's fastest growing minorities will vote against President Bush this year, according to a poll of Chinese- and Taiwanese-Americans. The poll also suggests that Taiwanese respondents are generally dissatisfied with President Chen Shui-bian, who faces a re-election vote on the island today.
(Excerpt) Read more at washtimes.com ...
Oh, okay, sure.
More than 2.5 million people joined hands to form a 500-kilometre (310-mile) human chain stretching the length of Taiwan in a huge anti-China protest ahead of the island's presidential elections next month, organisers said.
The high turnout for the government-backed protest highlighting the threat posed to the island from Chinese missiles was likely to boost the re-election chances of President Chen Shui-bian, analysts said.
There was no independent confirmation of the figures but the opposition Kuomintang (KMT) disputed the size of the turnout.
The show of strength was designed to galvanise Chen's supporters before the March 20 ballot, with polls showing him lagging behind his sole challenger, Lien Chan of the KMT.
Chen, of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), was at the organisers' headquarters at Miaoli, northern Taiwan, for the "Hand in Hand" demonstration. He linked hands with former KMT president and pro-independence campaigner Lee Teng-hui.
"This is a historic event crossing ethnic, geographic, partisan, gender and age boundaries. There is no minority or majority in Taiwan. Taiwan is an integral," he said.
"Let us hold our hands, a simple but warm act, to tell the world and all people who care about Taiwan that 'we love Taiwan and want peace'."
The protest, running from Keelung in the north to Pingtung in the south of the island, was called on the anniversary of February 28, 1947 when thousands of native Taiwanese were killed by KMT troops from the mainland in a bloody riot against the new rulers of China.
The episode poisoned relations between the KMT and native Taiwanese for decades.
Television pictures showed crowds at least 10 deep at points on the route through Taiwan as pro-government supporters joined hands at 2:28 pm (0628 GMT).
In the capital Taipei, thousands wearing "Yes Taiwan" caps gathered at the 2/28 peace memorial park, named after the 1947 incident, for speeches.
Taiwanese communities were also due to form human chains in Dallas, Houston, Seattle, Toronto and Vancouver, the organisers said.
The opposition KMT has accused the DPP of creating an ethnic divide and organised its own show of support with leader Lien part of a group carrying "peace torches" into a rally in the southern city of Kaohsiung.
The torches had been taken on a two-week jog around the island by supporters.
In a statement released before the rallies, Lien made his own appeal to heal wounds among the island's different ethnic groups. "Everyone on Taiwan is native Taiwanese sailing together through glory and humiliation and sharing the same destiny," he said.
Chen has called the island's first referendum to run alongside the presidential poll and an estimated 15 million voters will be asked whether the island should arm itself with more missiles and hold peace talks with Beijing.
Nationalists fled to Taiwan in 1949 after communists won the civil war in mainland China and the island has since been governed separately. Beijing insists the island be reunified with China, by force if necessary.
Chen has toned down his pro-independence message in the face of opposition from home and abroad, but increased his attacks on China in the run-up to the polls.
Wu Tung-yeh, a professor of political science at National Chengchi University, said the rally would help the DPP campaign although it was too early to say if it would influence the polls.
"It is unlikely this rally will win over any of KMT's supporters. It may have some effect on neutral voters, but it is hard to tell how many they can win," Wu said.
Cheng Wen-tsan, a spokesman for the DPP, predicted the rally would catapult Chen into the lead of the closely fought contest.
"The target of the demonstration and the referendum is China, not the KMT. KMT has made a huge mistake by refusing to take part in this activity," Cheng said.
KMT spokesman Alex Tsai said the protest would have no effect on the vote on March 20.
an overwhelming majority -- 92 percent -- identified themselves as Chinese or Chinese-Americans, and the remaining were of Taiwanese origin.
Either you are an American or you ain't. I hope to live long enough to hear those sweet words, "Get out!"
62 percent of Chinese Americans gave Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao a positive rating.
"Now!"
What about native-Ameriicans? Hmm, "native" refers to here. All other hyphenates suck.
New California Media - Ethnic Media Nationwide
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The people interviewed probably have as little tie to Taiwan as a person from Texas who was born in England lived on an Air Force base in England for a part of their youth.
That person isn't English.
The telephone poll organized by New California Media is the first nationwide multilingual survey to target Americans of ethnic Chinese origin, estimated at 2.8 million in the 2000 census.
Ethnic Chinese make up only 14% of the population of Taiwan. The headline is misleading because it implies that it surveyed ethnic Taiwanese, -- but it did not.
I tend to agree with the PRC disinfo possibility.
I have not attempted to learn of their views of America's political parties, but my guess is they will vote for those candidates who have a benign view of their ancestral homeland.
Inasmuch as both major political parties are predisposed to open border, and free trade policies now in place, an even democrat/republican split of this American sub-culture is a realistic possibility.
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