Friday, January 27, 2006

The Beginning of the End, Part VII

The Beginning of the End, Part VII
Another One Bites the Dust
Bevin Chu
January 26, 2006

Executive Summary: My previous article, "The Beginning of the End, Part VI, The DPP commits Political Suicide," described how the DPP party hierarchy has defaulted on its responsibility to redeem the party, and has instead meekly abetted Chen Shui-bian's betrayal of the DPP's once-exalted ideals. The day after I posted it, yet another former DPP chairman resigned from the party. Almost as if on cue, Lin Yi-hsiung, DPP party icon, quit the DPP in disgust. Lin is the third of seven living DPP party chairmen to resign from the party for essentially the same reason. Lin, like former DPP chairmen Shi Ming-teh and Hsu Hsing-liang before him, resigned because the DPP has sold its soul to the devil.

As a January 25, 2006 China Post article entitled "Former chairman of DPP quits party" put it:

A highly respected former chairman of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) yesterday announced his withdrawal from the ruling party ... Lin Yi-hsiung said it is pointless for him to stay in the DPP as he has no intention of being involved in any party affairs or of running for government posts under the party banner ... "With each election, ethnic groups have become more split, and class conflicts more serious. After the elections, they continue hating and fighting against each other, plunging the nation and society into disorder."

What Taiwan independence apologists in the US deceitfully characterize as "Taiwan's (lively/thriving/vibrant) democracy" is in fact vicious ethnic division and class conflict. Even Lin Yi-hsiung, a Deep Green ideologue who has never recanted his commitment to "Taiwanese" nation-building, acknowledges this grim reality. What Lin does not acknowledge is his own culpability in nurturing the very "ethnic splits and class conflicts, hating and fighting" he so righteously denounces.

Pan Blue and Pan Green intellectuals alike know that the vicious ethnic strife and class warfare plaguing Taiwan is rooted in the Taiwan independence nomenklatura's identity politics, which continually invents specious distinctions between "Chinese" (i.e., mainland Chinese) and "Taiwanese" (i.e., Chinese on Taiwan) for the sake of "Taiwanese" nation-building.

What distinguishes Pan Blue and Pan Green intellectuals is that Pan Blue intellectuals reject hate-mongering "Taiwanese" identity politics as morally despicable, while Pan Green intellectuals embrace it as "breaking a few eggs to make an omlet."

He said no one should be a permanent member of any party, whose supporters should all be temporary ones; otherwise the people would be too deeply involved in partisan politics to maintain their impartiality. He said he now has chosen to stand aloof from partisan politics to be a "master" of the country -- a position he said all ordinary people should adopt.

In other words, too many blind partisans, too many True Believers, too many "Yellow Dog" DPP supporters. Not enough independent-minded voters who think for themselves, regardless of party affiliation.

For those unfamiliar with the American expression "Yellow Dog," Wikipedia explains: In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Yellow Dog Democrats were voters in the U.S. Southern states who consistently voted for Democratic candidates — simply because of lingering resentment against Republicans during the Civil War and Reconstruction periods. The term arose from an apocryphal remark that a Southerner would vote for a yellow dog before he'd vote for a Republican.

Lin continues to be a politically influential figure. His latest attempt at exercising such influence came a few weeks ago when the DPP was arranging for a by-election of its chairman. He openly laid down conditions that would have disqualified the possible candidacies of President Chen and all former and incumbent premiers, including Yu Shyi-kun, who subsequently won the party's top post

In other words, Lin regrets having helped the opportunistic, corrupt Chen Shui-bian seize power in 2000. Lin now considers Chen and virtually all of the DPP's major players unfit to assume the role of DPP chairman and to lead the party out of its crisis.

DPP legislative whip Chen Chin-jun said that the party is very surprised by Lin's decision. Describing Lin as a "spiritual guide of democracy in Taiwan and a pillar of the DPP," Chen said that the impact on the DPP of Lin's withdrawal is more serious than the party's defeat in the December 3 local elections. Chen urged the DPP to do everything that it can to try to persuade Lin to stay. He also called for the party to conduct a serious evaluation of its operations, saying the fact that a few former DPP chairmen, including Shi Ming-teh and Hsu Hsin-liang, chose to leave reflects that there is something wrong in the party.

DPP legislative whip Chen Chin-jun is among the pitiful few DPP officials willing to say out loud what DPP leaders and followers all know. Lin's unceremonious departure is a damning indictment of the DPP, and seriously undermines public support for the party. Chen Chin-jun however, being a DPP official, was compelled to pull his punches. Cheng Li-wen was under no such compulsion.

Kuomintang (KMT) spokeswoman Cheng Li-wen said Lin's leaving the DPP means the party is "at a loss, in despair and in mourning" after losing its idealism. Cheng said Lin's decision carried such "great political significance" that the DPP could no longer hide from critical issues such as rampant corruption inside the party and the loss of passion in pursuit of its ideals. She said Lin was the third former chairman to quit the party, after Shih and Hsu. All of them are from the party's older generation that championed Taiwan's democratic movement, she pointed out. If the older generation stands for the DPP's soul and founding spirit, Lin's withdrawal from the party signifies that the party has lost its soul as well as its idealistic character, Cheng said. She said Lin's decision to leave at a time when a new Cabinet and a new DPP chairman were about to be sworn in is heaping much pressure on the party. "This is also a time for the DPP to stop being an ostrich and face reform issues squarely," she said.

KMT spokeswoman Cheng Li-wen, as usual, is right on target. Cheng ought to know. Cheng was formerly a DPP National Assemblywoman. Cheng was among the DPP's elite corps of forward-thinking Young Turks. Like Sisy Chen, Cheng was drummed out of the party for being too idealistic, too principled, too consistent. Like Sisy Chen, she called the DPP to account when it failed to live up to its loudly-trumpeted ideals. No longer a DPP official, Cheng Li-wen had no need to pull her punches.

The DPP has experienced a "loss of passion in pursuit of its ideals" because DPP leaders and followers realize their central ideal, Taiwan independence, is an impossible pipe dream, and don't know where to go from here.

As Chen Shui-bian, in a moment of rare honesty conceded, "I will not change the country's national title during my term in office... the situation does not permit us to change the name of the country at the moment, or even during the rest of my term... Lee Teng-hui couldn't do it during his 12 year term, and I can't do it in mine. Taiwan independence is self-delusion. Taiwan independence is a myth."

The DPP is a vehicle stuck in the mud. Its wheels spin madly, but the vehicle goes nowhere. An even better metaphor might be that the DPP is a ship without a rudder. The oarsmen row frantically, but the ship only travels in circles.

KMT legislative whip Pan Wei-kang suggested that the DPP undergo self-examination to determine whether its direction meets the expectations of all its members and the people of the country. She said Lin has shown his disappointment with the DPP, and that the people do not have faith in the government. KMT Legislator Wu Yu-sheng said he believes Lin wanted to leave the DPP because of his frustration with the performance of President Chen as well as of the party. Lin Huei-kuan, a legislative whip of the People First Party, echoed Wu's comments, saying he believes Lin must be very dissatisfied with President Chen's intervention in the formation of the new Cabinet headed by his designated premier, Su Tseng-chang.

Pan Wei-kang, Wu Yu-sheng, and Lin Huei-kuan have put their fingers on a key point.

A number of DPP officials have attempted to spin the DPP's string of setbacks at the polls as dissatisfaction with Chen Shui-bian individually, but not with the DPP collectively. This is nonsense. The Chinese people on Taiwan are dissatisfied not merely with Chen Shui-bian's flagrant corruption, but also with the DPP's Taiwan independence agenda.

Lin Yi-hsiung resigned from the DPP not merely because he was disgusted with Chen's performance as president, but because he was thoroughly disillusioned with the DPP as a political force. Su Tseng-chang's bogus "new" cabinet, populated by spineless Chen Shui-bian lackeys, reflecting zero commitment to genuine reform, was merely the last straw.

Even the DPP's ally, the Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU), described Lin's departure as a warning for the DPP. TSU whip Ho Min-hao said Lin was probably frustrated by the fact that President Chen has failed to listen to his advice and has continued sticking to his authoritarian style. "This (Lin's departure) is a serious warning for the DPP," said Ho, suggesting that the DPP government listen more to the voice of the people. "

Taiwan independence fellow travelers committed to their simplistic dichotomy of an "authoritarian [mainland] Chinese Goliath vs. a democratic Taiwanese David" may find it easy to rationalize away the flak from the Pan Blue camp, but how are they going to explain away the even heavier flak from the Deep Green camp?

The DPP's political death by suicide at its own hand continues apace.

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