James Soong
James Soong Chu-yu (born 16 March 1942) is a Taiwanese politician and perennial candidate for public office. He is the founder and current Chairman of the People First Party.
James Soong Soong Chu-yu | |
---|---|
宋楚瑜 | |
Chairman of the People First Party | |
Assumed office 31 March 2000 | |
Deputy | Chang Chau-hsiung |
Governor of Taiwan Province | |
In office 20 March 1993 – 20 December 1998 | |
Head of the Government Information Office | |
In office 25 January 1979 – 24 August 1984 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Xiangtan, Hunan, Republic of China | 16 March 1942
Political party | Kuomintang (1981–1999)[1] Independent (1999–2000) People First Party (2000–present) |
Spouse(s) | Viola Chen (1968–2011) |
Alma mater | National Chengchi University University of California, Berkeley Catholic University of America Georgetown University |
James Soong | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese | 宋楚瑜 | ||||||||||||||
|
Born to a Kuomintang military family of Hunanese origin, Soong began his political career as a Secretary to Premier Chiang Ching-kuo (later President) and rose to prominence as Director-General of the Government Information Office from 1979 to 1984. Upon Chiang's death Soong was instrumental in silencing conservatives in the KMT from blocking the ascendancy of Lee Teng-hui as KMT leader. Soong was the only elected governor of Taiwan Province from 1994 to 1998, before the streamlining of the provincial government. He placed second in the 2000 presidential election; his independent candidacy split the pro-Chinese reunification vote between himself and the KMT candidate Lien Chan leading to the ascendancy of Democratic Progressive Party candidate Chen Shui-bian. In the 2004 presidential election, he ran as vice president on the ticket of then Chairman Lien Chan of Kuomintang; they narrowly lost to Chen Shui-bian. Soong ran again as a candidate in the 2012 presidential race, garnering 2.77% of popular support. Soong's third presidential campaign in 2016 formed a split ticket with Chairwoman Hsu Hsin-ying of Minkuotang and won 12.84% of the vote. His 2020 campaign with running mate Sandra Yu finished last, with 4.2% of the vote.[2]
Early life and education
Soong was born in Xiangtan, Hunan province.[3][4] It is said his grandfather taught at the same school Mao Zedong attended as a student. His father, Soong Ta, was a career military officer staunchly loyal to ROC President Chiang Kai-shek and rose to the rank of Major General in the Nationalist Army from an enlisted sailor.[1] With the Nationalist defeat in the Chinese Civil War, the family fled to Taiwan in 1949.[5][6] He earned his bachelor's degree in diplomacy from National Chengchi University in 1964.
Soong travelled to the United States for graduate school and received an M.A. in political science from the University of California, Berkeley in 1967 and an M.S. in library science from The Catholic University of America in 1971. He earned a Ph.D. in political science from Georgetown University in 1974.
While at Berkeley, Soong met his future wife Viola Chen (陳萬水). They later had a son and a daughter.
Rise to power
As he was finishing his doctoral studies, he was recommended by Government Information Office (GIO) Director Fredrick Chien to be the English secretary of then-Premier Chiang Ching-kuo. Soong served as Secretary to Premier from 1974–1977 and with Chiang Ching-kuo's accession to the presidency, the Personal Secretary to the President from 1978–1981 and 1984-1989. Soong gained his public fame when he addressed the nation following the Carter administration's decision to break ties with the ROC in order to switch diplomatic ties to the People's Republic of China on December 16, 1978 in which he gave a patriotic condemnation of the American position and a ringing defense of the ROC.
Soon afterwards, President Chiang promoted Soong to become the youngest Director-General of the Government Information Office, in which he served from 1979 to 1984.
Soong and the rise of Lee Teng-hui
Upon Chiang Ching-kuo's death in 1988, Soong was seen as instrumental in consolidating the power of the new president, Lee Teng-hui. Soong was part of the Palace Faction (宮廷派) that included Chiang loyalists such as Hau Pei-tsun and Lee Huan and which sought to limit Lee Teng-hui and his native Taiwanese faction's role in the government. During the KMT's central standing committee on the day of Chiang's funeral, when the Palace Faction sought to delay Lee's accession to the party Chairmanship, Soong unexpectedly made an impassioned plea in favor of Lee, declaring that "Each day of delay is a day of disrespect to Ching-kuo." He also made a veiled criticism of Soong Mei-ling (with whom he was unrelated), implying that she had returned to Taiwan after her stepson's death to try to reassume power.
Soong established himself as one of the few mainlanders who were also loyal to Lee. In support of Soong, Lee coined the term "New Taiwanese" to describe a person born in mainland China, raised in Taiwan, who calls Taiwan home. Lee moved swiftly to promote Soong to KMT Secretary-General, a position Soong held from 1989 to 1993. In 1993, Lee appointed him Governor of Taiwan Province.
Governorship: 1994–98
In 1994 Soong was elected and became the only directly elected Governor of Taiwan Province. He was widely perceived to be an excellent campaigner and his excellent showing in the governorship ended hopes by the DPP of a "Yeltsin effect", by which an elected governor would have more legitimacy than the national government, due to the President being still elected by the National Assembly at that time.
Despite his Mainlander background, Soong proved to be a popular politician among all ethnic groups on Taiwan, in part because he was one of the first KMT politicians to attempt to speak in Taiwanese Hokkien in political and formal occasions.
After Premier Lien Chan was elected vice-president in 1996, the premiership was vacated in 1997 after the Judicial Yuan ruled out that the person could not serve both vice-president and premier. Soong felt that as Governor of Taiwan, he was the natural successor to Lien, but President Lee believed that Soong should serve out his term. President Lee appointed Vincent Siew, whom Soong considered a subordinate, and this act led to the split between Soong and Lee.
The position of Governor of Taiwan was eliminated in December 1998 following a National Development Council meeting in 1996, when it suggested that the administrative structure of the Taiwanese government be streamlined. Soong and his supporters believe this to have been a political move by President Lee to cut off Soong's power base, but proponents of the downsizing called it a pragmatic move to eliminate contradictory administrative territory. Soong tendered his resignation on December 31 of the same year, but President Lee did not accept it.
2000 presidential election
After losing the KMT presidential nomination to then-vice president Lien Chan, Soong ran as an independent in the 2000 Presidential elections. Soong advocated a gradual union between Taiwan and the mainland by first signing a non-aggression pact followed by the formation of a cross-strait union similar to the European Union. His platform called for the characterization of relations between the Mainland and Taiwan as neither foreign nor domestic. Although widely seen as the candidate most friendly to Mainland China, Soong took particular effort to counter the perception that he would "sell out" Taiwan.
The KMT responded by expelling Soong and his supporters from the party. In the final months leading to the 2000 elections, the KMT, then under Lee Teng-hui's leadership, sued Soong for theft, alleging that as party Secretary-General, he stole millions of Taiwan dollars in cash intended for the family of the late President Chiang Ching-kuo and hid the money in the Chunghsing Bills Finance Company. In defense he stated that the money in those bank accounts was in fact all from the KMT, and he insisted that the money transfer was authorized by then-KMT chairman, Lee Teng-hui. These statements have been substantiated by an internal KMT memo signed by Lee which were published by the court many years later.
The scandal hurt Soong's clean image. Initially leading in the polls, Soong narrowly lost the election with 36.84% of the vote to Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party with 39.3%. Lien came in a distant third with only 23.1%. One common belief from the pro-blue camp in Taiwan is that Lee Teng-hui favored the unpopular Vice President Lien Chan over the highly popular Soong in a deliberate effort to sabotage the Kuomintang and was secretly supporting Chen, despite the fact that Lee is supposed to favor Kuomintang's own nominee Lien. Some believe Lee feared Soong would expose the corruption in his administration, and undermine his legacy.
Political affiliation | Candidate | Votes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
President | Vice President | Total votes | Percentage | |||
Democratic Progressive Party | Chen Shui-bian | Annette Lu | 4,977,697 | 39.30% | ||
Independent | James Soong | Chang Chau-hsiung | 4,664,972 | 36.84% | ||
Kuomintang | Lien Chan | Vincent Siew | 2,925,513 | 23.10% | ||
Independent | Hsu Hsin-liang | Josephine Chu | 79,429 | 0.63% | ||
New Party | Li Ao | Elmer Fung | 16,782 | 0.13% | ||
Total | 12,786,671 | 82.69% voter turnout | ||||
Valid votes | 12,664,393 | |||||
Invalid votes | 122,278 |
After losing the election, Soong's supporters protested in front of the KMT party headquarters and blockaded the building for a few days. They succeeded in pressuring Lee Teng-hui to resign as KMT Chairman in favor of Lien Chan. Within weeks, Soong and his supporters formed the People First Party (PFP), considered a spin-off from the KMT.
Prosecutors later dropped all charges against Soong in the Chunghsing Scandal. In 2003, the investigation was reopened, with former President Lee (now expelled from the KMT and the "spiritual leader" of the pro-independence Taiwan Solidarity Union) testifying against Soong in court. However, with the KMT allied with the People First Party for the 2004 presidential election, the KMT aided Soong in his defense, providing documents signed by Lee. KMT Chairman Lien Chan claimed the KMT was misled into filing the lawsuit against Soong. The KMT dropped the charges and is still trying to collect the money that had been returned and was deposited in the court by Soong.
2004 presidential election
Despite the personal rivalries between Lien, the KMT chairman after 2000, and Soong, the KMT and People First Party pledged to cooperate in future elections to prevent splitting the vote. Though losses in the 2001 legislative elections made the DPP the largest single party in the Legislative Yuan, the pan-blue coalition retained a narrow majority over the pan-green coalition.
Soong ran as Vice Presidential candidate under Lien Chan in the 2004 elections. Some believe that the PFP's lack of experienced candidates in the December 2002 mayoral elections in Taipei and Kaohsiung (the PFP supported the KMT's candidates), and the PFP's poor performance the city council elections in those cities at the same time were major setbacks to Soong's chances of being the KMT-PFP candidate for president. There were widespread rumors that Soong agreed to take the Vice-Presidential post in exchange for a pledge by Lien to give him significant power including the Premiership. Many KMT members opposed the linkage as they considered Soong an opportunist and traitor. Soong's supporters pointed out that he was more popular than Lien, as consistently demonstrated by polls, and the results of the 2000 presidential elections. Though both men garnered a combined 60% of the vote in 2000 (compared to Chen's 39%) they lost to Chen in 2004 by a mere 0.22% of the vote and never conceded.
Candidates and nominating parties | Votes | % | Votes before recount | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chen Shui-bian and Annette Lu |
6,446,900 | 50.11 | 6,471,970 | |
Lien Chan and James Soong |
6,423,906 | 49.89 | 6,442,452 | |
Total (turnout 80.28 %) | 12,914,422 | 100.0 | ||
Invalid votes | 337,297 | |||
Votes cast | 13,251,719 |
After the 2004 election
After the 2004 Presidential election, Soong actively sought the merger of the KMT and People First Party. However, he ceased doing so after the ROC Legislative Election, 2004. Although the pan-blue coalition did well, the PFP did not, and Soong ended talk of a KMT-PFP merger. In February 2005, he signed a 10 point consensus program with President Chen Shui-Bian which brought heavy criticism to Chen. The possibility of DPP-PFP cooperation ended in May 2005, when Soong visited mainland China to meet with General Secretary Hu Jintao of the Communist Party of China. Initially, Chen stated that Soong was to deliver a secret message to the PRC leadership, but Soong denied this.
In the 2005 KMT chairmanship election, Soong, who retains significant following within the KMT, despite initially instructing party officials not to support either Ma Ying-jeou or Wang Jin-pyng, endorsed Wang at the last minute. The endorsement appeared to backfire, however, as Ma defeated Wang by a rather large margin of 72% to 28%.
On July 22, 2005, Soong, unopposed, was reelected chairman of the PFP.
On November 17, 2005, Soong was awarded NT$10 million in a defamation suit against former President Lee Teng-hui, who had alleged that Soong was playing mahjong while his supporters were protesting on the streets in April 2004. A three-judge panel of the Taipei District Court ruled that Lee must apologize and compensate Soong, saying that Lee's "groundless" remark had damaged Soong's reputation. In addition, the court ordered Lee to publish a half-page apology in major newspapers for three consecutive days.
Visit to mainland China 2005
Soong's visit to mainland China followed quickly on the heels of the trail-blazing visit of KMT Chairman Lien Chan. A few weeks after shaking Lien's hands at the airport and wishing him luck, Soong took his turn at the spotlight. Despite early predictions by critics that the two political peers would try to out-stage each other, the two visits proved to be similar and complementary in many respects.
Soong's whirlwind 9 day, 5 city "Bridge Laying" tour began on May 5, with a trip to the traditional Chinese capital of Xi'an. There, he visited the tomb memorial for the Yellow Emperor, a near-mythical historical figure from whom the Chinese believe they are descended. He then visited Nanjing, the former capital of the Republic of China, where he visited the tomb of ROC founder Sun Yat-sen. After a brief visit to Shanghai, Soong made an emotional return to his ancestral home in Hunan province. Soong and his family visited and honored the grave of his maternal grandmother buried in Xiangtan in a widely televised emotional ceremony. Choosing to appear as familiar as possible to his mainland hosts, Soong spoke his greetings in the local dialect in each of the cities that he visited.
Beyond sentimental visits, the important political aspect of his tour comes from his visit to Beijing. There, he shook hands with Hu Jintao, General Secretary of the Communist Party of China, and exchanged presents with him; Soong gave Hu a work of glass art from Liuli Gongfang, and received a piece of Jingdezhen porcelain from Hu.[7] Soong was only the second major political figure from Taiwan to ever do so. The carefully scripted red-carpet ceremony was identical to the previous greeting for KMT Chairman Lien Chan. The key out-come of the meeting was the publication of a shared political platform between the Communist Party and Soong's People's First Party. Finally, Soong lectured at Tsinghua University, an echo of Lien's lecture at Peking University four weeks prior.
Soong's visit was designed to emphasize his belief in common shared roots for the Chinese people, a reflection of his pro-unification sentiment. He specifically chose to honor the historical ancestor of the Chinese people, the contemporary father of the Republic of China, and then his own direct ancestors in that precise order. His public comments addressed this continuous theme as well, receiving rapturous support from his mainland audience. The political consensus borne of the visit between the PFP and the CPC called for practical actions towards establishing links between Taiwan and mainland China, while firmly resisting Taiwanese independence.
2006 Taipei mayoral election
Tax issue
On August 17, 2006, Taiwan's Administrative Supreme Court handed down a ruling against Soong in a case of tax evasion. He was charged gift taxes by the National Tax Administration from events in 1994 when he wired NT$42 million from his election campaign account to that of his daughterinlaw in the United States. Soong's argument was that he had wired the money to his daughterinlaw in order to pay off remaining campaign debts and to establish a Foundation, and that he was not simply "gifting" the money to her. The Court however found that the first money was not given to the Foundation until December 2001, and ruled that the money had been used as his private assets and that therefore gift tax was payable. He was assessed NT$13 million in gift tax, with fine also of NT$13 million, for a total sum of NT$26 million.
Taipei campaign
On October 18, 2006, Soong formally announced and registered his candidacy for the Mayoralty of Taipei City, Taiwan's capital and largest city, in the local government elections to be held in December 2006.[8] Soong registered as a "non-partisan" candidate without a party affiliation, declaring that he had taken a leave of absence from his post as Chairman of the PFP.
After his defeat in Taipei Mayoral Election on the 9th of December, 2006, he won only 4% of cast ballots, James Soong announced that he will retire from politics, which entailed giving up the chairmanship of his party, the PFP. With this announcement and with no clear goal, the PFP face an uncertain future which could speed up any merger with the Kuomintang.
2006 Taipei City Mayoral Election Result | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No | Candidate | Party | Votes | % | ||
1 | Li Ao | Independent | 7,795 | 0.61% | ||
2 | Clara Chou[lower-alpha 1] | Taiwan Solidarity Union | 3,372 | 0.26% | ||
3 | Frank Hsieh | Democratic Progressive Party | 525,869 | 40.89% | ||
4 | James Soong[lower-alpha 2] | Independent | 53,281 | 4.14% | ||
5 | Hau Lung-pin | Kuomintang | 692,085 | 53.81% | ||
6 | Ke Tsi-hai (柯賜海) | Independent | 3,687 | 0.29% |
Claims made by former president Chen Shui-bian
Chen Shui-bian claimed in an interview with a cable TV channel in May 2005 that Soong met Chen Yunlin in the United States in February that year.
Following this claim, on February 15, 2007 Taipei District Court ruled Thursday that President Chen Shui-bian must pay James Soong NT$3 million (US$91,183) in damages and apologize in the top three newspapers for his allegation that Soong met secretly with China's State Council Taiwan Affairs Office Director Chen Yunlin in 2005. The court said President Chen failed to carry out necessary verification before making his allegation. "The president exercises overall control over the executive sector resources and his responsibility to verify information must be weighted," a court spokesman said.
PFP spokesman Lee Hung-Chun called the judgment "comforting" but said that it had come too late. "It took more than a year for the first judgment to come out," he said, adding that this meant the public did not get the chance to learn the truth during a time when the political situation was changing rapidly. Chen's counsel said that he would appeal to the High Court.
Claiming that his remarks were based on "intelligence", Chen also said Soong promised during the meeting to oppose a proposed constitutional amendment that would allow for popular referendums on future constitutional amendments, in exchange for Beijing's approval for Soong to visit China.
Soong filed a defamation suit against Chen in June 2005, demanding a symbolic NT$1 in compensation and a published apology in four major local newspapers for three consecutive days. After Chen repeated his claim in another TV interview in October that same year. Soong later extended his compensation demand to NT$50 million and asked Chen to publish an apology in four internationally famous newspapers in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Japan, as well as in three local ones.
According to the written judgment, Chen said that the intelligence about Soong's activity was submitted to him by Bureau of Investigation Director-General Yeh Cherng-maw. However, Yeh told the court that he had warned Chen that the intelligence, some of which he admitted was drawn from media speculation, was difficult to check.
The judgment said that as president, Chen must have understood the weakness of the information and could have ordered the national security system to conduct further verification, but decided not to bother.
2012 presidential election
After a petition, Soong, for the first time as a People First Party presidential candidate, ran the 2012 presidential election together with Lin Ruey-shiung, a National Taiwan University professor in public health. Soong described the "Blue-Green rivalry" in Taiwanese politics as an epidemic and stated that Lin, as a doctor, was his partner to cure this "disease". He contended that Taiwanese people wanted a third party other than the KMT and the DPP, and that the PFP was their choice.
Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
President | Vice president | |||||
Kuomintang | Ma Ying-jeou | Wu Den-yih | 6,891,139 | 51.60% | ||
Democratic Progressive Party | Tsai Ing-wen | Su Jia-chyuan | 6,093,578 | 45.63% | ||
People First Party | James Soong | Lin Ruey-shiung | 369,588 | 2.77% | ||
Valid votes | 13,354,305 | 99.27% | ||||
Invalid and blank votes | 97,711 | 0.73% | ||||
Total votes | 13,452,016 | 100% | ||||
Eligible voters and turnout | 18,086,455 | 74.38% |
2016 presidential election
Soong announced his intention to join the 2016 Taiwan presidential election on 6 August 2015 with running mate Hsu Hsin-ying of the Minkuotang.[11] The Soong–Hsu ticket finished third.[12]
Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
President | Vice president | |||||
Democratic Progressive Party | Tsai Ing-wen | Chen Chien-jen | 6,894,744 | 56.12% | ||
Kuomintang | Eric Chu | Wang Ju-hsuan | 3,813,365 | 31.04% | ||
People First Party | James Soong | Hsu Hsin-ying | 1,576,861 | 12.84% | ||
Valid votes | 12,284,970 | 98.69% | ||||
Invalid and blank votes | 163,332 | 1.31% | ||||
Total votes | 12,448,302 | 100% | ||||
Eligible voters and turnout | 18,782,991 | 66.27% |
2020 presidential election
Soong contested the 2020 Taiwan presidential election, beginning his campaign on 13 November 2019.[13] Soong and Sandra Yu formed the People First Party ticket.[14] The pair registered their candidacy with the Central Election Commission on 18 November 2019.[15] Soong and Yu finished third in the presidential election, with 4.2% of the vote.[2][16]
Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
President | Vice president | |||||
Democratic Progressive Party | Tsai Ing-wen | William Lai | 8,170,231 | 57.13% | ||
Kuomintang | Han Kuo-yu | Chang San-cheng | 5,522,119 | 38.61% | ||
People First Party | James Soong | Sandra Yu | 608,590 | 4.26% | ||
Total | 14,300,940 | 100% | ||||
Valid votes | 14,300,940 | 98.87% | ||||
Invalid votes | 163,631 | 1.13% | ||||
Votes cast / turnout | 14,464,571 | 74.90% | ||||
Eligible voters | 19,311,105 |
Notes
- Despite Chou's expulsion from the Taiwan Solidarity Union on November 9, 2006, the party could not withdraw their recommendation for Chou under Republic of China's Public Officials Election and Recall Law. She would still contest the elections as a TSU candidate.[9]
- James Soong was Chairman of the People's First Party at the time of the elections, but entered the elections as an independent.[10]
References
- Tedards, Bo (15 March 2000). "The many faces of James Soong". Taipei Times. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
- Maxon, Ann (12 January 2020). "2020 Elections: Han Kuo-yu concedes race as KMT leadership resigns". Taipei Times. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
- Xing, Zhigang; Jiao, Xiaoyang (10 May 2005). "Hometown gives Soong a heroic welcome". China Daily. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
- Ni, Yanshuo (2005). "Increasing Connections". Beijing Review. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
- "Profile: James Soong". BBC. 12 January 2012. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
- Ellis, Samson (12 November 2019). "Pro-China Veteran's Taiwan Election Bid Deals Blow to Beijing". Bloomberg. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
- 胡錦濤贈宋景德鎮瓷器 宋回贈琉璃工坊創作. Eastern Television News (in Chinese). 2005-05-12. Retrieved 2008-01-11.
- Mo, Yan-chih (18 October 2006). "Soong declares candidacy for mayor". Taipei Times. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
- "TSU expels Taipei mayoral candidate". China Post. 10 November 2006. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
- Shih, Hsiu-chuan (10 December 2006). "Elections 2006: People First Party chairman announces an end to his career". Taipei Times. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
- Focus Taiwan: James Soong announces presidential bid
- http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/people-first-party-s/2031974.html
- Wang, Cheng-chung; Huang, Frances (13 November 2019). "James Soong announces presidential bid (update)". Central News Agency. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
- Chen, Yun; Hsiao, Sherry (14 November 2019). "James Soong joins presidential race". Taipei Times. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
- Shan, Shelley (19 November 2019). "2020 ELECTIONS: PFP's Soong registers for election". Taipei Times. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
- Yang, Chun-hui; Shih, Hsiao-kuang; Lin, Liang-sheng (12 January 2020). "2020 Elections: Tsai wins by a landslide". Taipei Times. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Soong. |
Wikiquote has quotations related to: James Soong |
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Lien Chan as Chairman of the Taiwan Provincial Government |
Governor of Taiwan Province 1993–1998 |
Succeeded by Chao Shou-po as Chairman of the Taiwan Provincial Government |
Preceded by Ting Mao-shih |
Head of the Government Information Office 1979–1984 |
Succeeded by Chang King-yuh |
Party political offices | ||
New office | Chairman of the People First party 2000–present |
Incumbent |