Terry Gou, Founder of Foxconn, Declares Candidacy for Taiwan Presidency, Vowing to Improve Relations with China

Terry Gou, Founder of Foxconn, Declares Candidacy for Taiwan Presidency, Vowing to Improve Relations with China

The ‌billionaire founder of tech giant ⁢Foxconn, Terry Gou, ‌has announced he‌ will run for president of Taiwan as an independent ‍candidate, pledging to fix cross-strait relations and boost Taiwan’s economy.

At a press conference​ on Monday, Gou – a well-known and outspoken businessman – announced what⁢ he called‍ “the era of entrepreneurs’ rule”.

“I have decided to join the 2024 presidential race,” he said, touting his business and finance experience, including dealings with China.

“Give me four years and I promise that I will bring 50 years⁤ of peace to the Taiwan Strait and‍ build the deepest foundation for the mutual trust across the strait ​… Taiwan must not become Ukraine and I will not let Taiwan ⁢become the next Ukraine.”

Taiwan’s choice: who will replace ⁢Tsai ⁣Ing-wen as president amid​ China tensions?Read more

Gou has hinted at running for several months after he was not chosen as the candidate for the main opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT). He ‌pledged support ‌for ​the KMT’s chosen candidate, Hou Yo-ih, but continued to hold public campaign-style events.

Gou will ‍need to collect 290,000 signatures by early November to ⁤qualify as an independent candidate.

China’s ‍government has vowed to subsume Taiwan into the Chinese state, under what it calls “reunification”, but which is overwhelmingly rejected by Taiwan’s‍ people and its major political parties. ​Under Xi Jinping’s rule, ‍China⁤ has grown increasingly aggressive​ towards Taiwan. It cut ⁢communications with Taipei after president Tsai Ing-wen’s election win in 2016, and in recent years has sent increasing numbers⁣ of war planes and ships into⁢ Taiwan’s air defence identification zone (ADIZ).

On Saturday the Chinese military appeared​ to stage a total ​encirclement of the main island, launching 32 aircraft and nine ships, including weaponised‍ drones, fighter jets, reconnaissance aircraft, and bombers. It prompted both Taiwan and Japan to scramble their own warplanes in response.

32 PLA aircraft and 9 PLAN vessels around Taiwan were detected by 6 a.m.(UTC+8) today. R.O.C. Armed Forces have monitored the situation and tasked CAP aircraft, Navy vessels, and land-based missile systems​ to respond these activities. pic.twitter.com/XtR9WMT2tV

— 國防部 Ministry of National Defense, R.O.C. 🇹🇼 (@MoNDefense) August ‍26, 2023

On Monday, Gou blamed Tsai’s ruling Democratic Progressive party​ (DPP) for escalating tensions, calling them arrogant and corrupt.

“Under the⁣ rule of the Democratic Progressive party in⁣ the ​past seven years ‍or so, internationally, they lead Taiwan towards the danger of war. Domestically, their ⁣policies are filled with mistakes,” he⁤ said.

The entrance⁢ of Gou into the campaign⁣ adds further intrigue to what was already an unusual race. Lai Ching-te, ‌the current vice-president and presidential nominee for the ruling DPP, is polling ahead of both the KMT’s Hou, the current mayor of​ New Taipei City and a ⁤former police chief, and Ko Wen-je, the former…

2023-08-27 23:37:42
Source from www.theguardian.com

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