Taiwan voters just cut China’s Xi Jinping down to size – Analysis

The Taiwanese, especially after seeing how Beijing suffocated Hong Kong in the past four years, do not want to be ruled by China

The results are in. Taiwan’s voters stood up to China and all its war talk of recent weeks.

Vice President Lai Ching-te of the Democratic Progressive Party won the presidency on Saturday in a three-way race with 40.1% of the vote. Hsiao Bi-khim, recently Taipei’s representative in Washington, was elected vice president.

New Taipei City Mayor Hou Yu-ih, of the opposition Kuomintang received 33.5%, and Ko Wen-je of the new Taiwan People’s Party came in third with 26.5%.

The election was historic. For the first time since 1996, when the island republic held its first democratic presidential election, a party has won a third straight presidential term.

Previously, the DPP, as the governing party is known, and the Kuomintang or KMT, traded the presidency every eight years.

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Lai’s campaign was ailing a few weeks ago as voters were expressing dissatisfaction with DPP governance on bread-and-butter issues. Then Beijing decided to weigh in, calling the vice president a “separatist” and “destroyer of peace.” As a result, ethnic Taiwanese voters began to focus on their ethnicity and the China threat.

The “Green” DPP represents people who think of themselves as “Taiwanese.” Consistently more than 60% of the island’s 23.5 million people self-identify as “Taiwanese Only”—some polls show over 80%—while generally fewer than 5% say they are “Chinese Only.”

Continue here: Gatestone Institute