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Challengers to Mainstream Parties in Taiwan's 2020 Elections Continuity Rather Than the Expected Change

摘要


Taiwan has had a highly stable party system since democratization, with the Kuomintang and Democratic Progressive Party dominating elections. Although they have faced a number of challengers over the last three decades, the two mainstream parties have always managed to maintain their dominance. However, in early 2019, it looked as though an earthquake election was in the cards in the upcoming January 2020 national elections. The mainstream parties faced unprecedented challenges both from within their own parties and from rival smaller challenger parties. What makes 2020 so puzzling is that it would ultimately be a maintaining election, with little change in both the parliamentary and presidential results compared to four years earlier. This essay tries to explain why 2020 featured continuity rather than the expected change in the party system. This is done with reference to (1) the China factor, (2) shortcomings in the challengers' campaigns, and (3) institutional factors.

參考文獻


Geoffrey Evans and Pippa Norris eds., Critical Elections: British Parties and Voters in Long-Term Perspective (London: Sage, 1998), xxxi.
Dafydd Fell, “Parties and Party Systems,” in Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Taiwan, ed. Gunter Schubert (London: Routledge, 2016), 78-103.
Dafydd Fell, “Measuring and Explaining the Electoral Fortunes of Small Parties in Taiwan’s Party Politics,” Issues and Studies: An International Quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian Affairs 50, no. 1 (2014): 153-188.
Ming-sho Ho and Chun-hao Huang, “Movement Parties in Taiwan, 1987-2016,” Asian Survey 57, no. 2 (2017): 343-367.
Francis Fukuyama, Bjorn Dressel, and Chang Boo-Seung, “Facing the Perils of Presidentialism?” Journal of Democracy 16, no. 2 (April 2005): 102-116.

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