New Party (Taiwan)

New Party
新黨
ChairmanWu Cherng-dean
Vice ChairmanLee Sheng-feng
FounderJaw Shaw-kong, Yok Mu-ming et al.
FoundedAugust 22, 1993
Split fromKuomintang
HeadquartersTaipei
Membership (2020)at least 500
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing to far-right
National affiliationPan-Blue Coalition
Legislative Yuan
0 / 113
Municipal mayors
0 / 6
Magistrates/mayors
0 / 16
Councilors
1 / 912
Township/city mayors
0 / 204
Party flag
Website
www.np.org.tw
New Party
Traditional Chinese新黨
Simplified Chinese新党
New Party Headquarters

The New Party (NP; Chinese: 新黨; pinyin: Xīn Dǎng; Hakka: Sîn Tóng), formerly the Chinese New Party (CNP), is a Chinese nationalist political party in the Republic of China (Taiwan).

The New Party was established in 1993 due to a split from the Kuomintang by members of the New Kuomintang Alliance, who were dissatisfied with Kuomintang Chairman Lee Teng-hui. In the 2000 presidential elections, the party symbolically nominated Li Ao as its candidate, but both Li and the party encouraged party members to support former Kuomintang member James Soong. It won one seat in the 2001 legislative elections, and saw significant support in the 2005–06 municipal elections, though its influence has waned since then.

The New Party is considered to be on the right-wing or the far-right of the political spectrum. It strongly supports unification with China and opposes Taiwanese independence.

History

The New Party was formed on 22 August 1993 out of a split from the then-ruling Kuomintang (KMT) by members of the New Kuomintang Alliance. Members of the Alliance had accused KMT Chairman Lee Teng-hui of autocratic tendencies and moving the party away from Chinese unification. Co-founders of the New Party included Chen Kuei-miao. Originally, the party wanted to keep the name of the faction, but was prevented from doing so due to the similarity of names. The name "New Party" was seemingly inspired by the contemporary electoral success of the Japan New Party.

At this time, the party favored direct presidential elections, the ideals of Sun Yat-sen, voluntary service instead of military service, and "equal protection of human rights." The party also called for direct flights between Taiwan and the mainland, speaking of a "Great Chinese Common Market."

In the mid-1990s, the New Party attracted support from the KMT old guard as well as young urban professionals. The New Party was aided by former Finance Minister Wang Chien-shien and former Environmental Protection Administration Director Jaw Shaw-kong, who had charismatic and clean images.

In the 2000 presidential election, the party nominated writer and dissident Li Ao, who ran a spirited but token campaign. In the election, most members of the party supported former provincial governor James Soong, who ran as an independent candidate after losing the KMT nomination and subsequently being expelled from the KMT, and in fact both Li Ao and the New Party leader Lee Ching-hua encouraged people to support him. In the 2001 Legislative Yuan election, the party won a single seat, Wu Cherng-dean's, in Kinmen.

In the 2005–06 municipal elections, the New Party made significant gains, seating over a dozen members into public office. The New Party also gained four seats in the Taipei Mayor's private offices.

Since the 2008 Legislative Yuan elections, the New Party has not won any seats, while the party supported most of the KMT candidates.

Ideology and policies

The New Party considered to be to be a right-wing or far-right political party. It strongly opposes Taiwanese independence and supports Chinese unification.

In August 2019, it announced a proposal to unify China under the "one country, two systems" principle. The proposal includes post-unification goals such as maintaining a multi-party political system, a legal ban on the Taiwan independence movement, reducing the size of Taiwan's armed forces, inclusion of Taiwanese representatives in China's delegation to the United Nations, and integration of Taiwanese business in the Belt and Road Initiative.

Election results

Yok Mu-ming at the New Party rally in 228 Park.

Presidential elections

Election Candidate Running mate Total votes Share of votes Outcome
2000 Li Ao Elmer Fung 16,782 0.13% Lost Red XN
2020 Yang Shih-kuang Withdrew

Legislative elections

Election Total seats won Total votes Share of votes Outcome of election Election leader
1995
21 / 164
1,222,931 13.0% Increase21 seats; Opposition Chen Kuei-miao
1998
11 / 225
708,465 7.1% Decrease10 seats; Opposition Chou Yang-shan
2001
1 / 225
269,620 2.9% Decrease8 seats; Governing coalition (Pan-Blue) Yok Mu-ming
2004
1 / 225
12,137 0.13% Steady; Governing coalition (Pan-Blue) Yok Mu-ming
2008
0 / 113
199,402 53.5% Decrease1 seats; No seats Yok Mu-ming
2012
0 / 113
10,678 0.08% Steady; No seats Yok Mu-ming
2016
0 / 113
510,074 4.18% Steady; No seats Yok Mu-ming
2020
0 / 113
147,303 1.04% Steady; No seats Yok Mu-ming
2024
0 / 113
40,429 0.29% Steady; No seats Wu Cherng-dean

Local elections

Election Mayors &
Magistrates
Councils Third-level
Municipal heads
Third-level
Municipal councils
Fourth-level
Village heads
Election Leader
1994
province-level only
0 / 3
15 / 175
Wang Chien-shien
1997-1998
0 / 23
10 / 886
0 / 319
Chou Yang-shan
1998
municipalities only
0 / 2
10 / 96
Chen Kuei-miao
2001
1 / 23
3 / 897
0 / 319
Hsieh Chi-ta, Levi Ying
2002
municipalities only
0 / 2
5 / 96
Yok Mu-ming
2005
1 / 23
2 / 901
0 / 319
Yok Mu-ming
2006
municipalities only
0 / 2
4 / 96
Yok Mu-ming
2009
0 / 17
0 / 587
0 / 211
Yok Mu-ming
2010
municipalities only
0 / 5
3 / 314
0 / 3,757
Yok Mu-ming
2014
unified
0 / 22
2 / 906
0 / 204
0 / 2,137
0 / 7,836
Yok Mu-ming
2018
unified
0 / 22
2 / 912
0 / 204
0 / 2,148
0 / 7,744
Yok Mu-ming
2022
unified
0 / 22
1 / 910
0 / 204
0 / 2,139
0 / 7,748
Wu Cherng-dean

National Assembly elections

Election Total seats won Total votes Share of votes Outcome of election Election leader
1996
46 / 334
1,417,209 13.6% Increase46 seats; Opposition Chen Kuei-miao
2005
3 / 300
34,253 0.88% Decrease43 seats; Opposition (Rejecting amendments) Yok Mu-ming

Leaders

Convenors of the New Party National Committee
Chairmen of the New Party
  • Yok Mu-ming (June 2003 – 21 February 2021)
  • Wu Cherng-dean (since 21 February 2021)
Vice chairmen of the New Party

See also


This page was last updated at 2024-03-16 07:39 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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