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2012年一月十四日是值得紀念的一天,Google的首頁和YAHOO都擺上象徵性的投票。

表示我們選舉總統的民主投票已相當成熟。這投票的結果直接影響到兩岸三地的經濟和安定。

就連國外的媒體也在第一時間上傳文章,內容也是說看好連任的馬總統後來當選的趨勢。

恭喜馬英九總統當選中華民國第十三任的總統!

 

Taiwan Ruling Party Claims Victory In Pres. Polls

by The Associated Press

TAIPEI, Taiwan January 14, 2012, 06:56 am ET

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan's ruling party claimed a re-election victory for President Ma Ying-jeou on Saturday, a result that would keep the island strengthening its economic ties to China while reducing the chances of new regional tensions.

With about 80 percent of the vote counted, Ma was leading challenger Tsai Ing-wen of the opposition Democratic Progressive Party by about six percentage points. A third candidate, James Soong, a former heavyweight in Ma's Nationalist Party, had just 2.8 percent of the vote.

Ma was expected to appear before jubilant supporters who had thronged to his campaign headquarters in downtown Taipei, the capital.

"Voters used their ballots to support us because we were on the right track to push for a peaceful cross-strait relationship and to gain diplomatic space," said Taipei Mayor Hau Long-bin, a Nationalist Party member.

Ma, a 61-year-old former justice minister and Taipei mayor, staked his re-election on his success in tying Taiwan's high-tech economy ever closer to China's lucrative markets.

Tsai, 55, who has a doctorate from the London School of Economics, had shown no sign of undoing the economic aspects of Ma's China policies, though she charged that they have helped spawn economic inequality in Taiwan. She had also accused Ma of undermining Taiwan's de facto independence in exchange for benefits from the mainland — a claim that resonated strongly with her party's pro-independence base.

Beijing sees in Ma its best hope of promoting its long-held policy of bringing Taiwan under its control, not least because of his declared willingness to consider entering into political talks if he is re-elected. The United States favored no candidate but regards a continuation of good cross-strait ties as a key to regional peace and economic development.

Eighteen million Taiwanese were eligible to vote in Saturday's polls, and about 80 percent of them were believed to have voted. Legislative elections being held at the same time were likely to see Ma's Nationalists retain a majority in the 113-seat house.

Ma and Tsai had crisscrossed the island for weeks in a hard-hitting campaign, offering their competing visions for Taiwan's future.

Ma's signature achievement has been the completion of a China trade deal in June 2010 that lowered tariffs on hundreds of goods. While most of Taiwan's $124 billion worth of exports to China last year were electronic goods such as television displays and cell phone chips, there was also a big upsurge in agricultural sales from southern Taiwan, long a stronghold of Tsai's party.

Taipei bank manager Frank Chang said he voted for Ma because of his efforts to improve ties with Beijing.

"China is a major economic power with the world's biggest demand for goods," he said. "As a small island, Taiwan cannot isolate itself from the mainland and still maintain a viable economy."

Taiwan and China split amid civil war in 1949. China continues to regard the democratic island of 23 million people as part of its territory, and has worked insistently to bring it into the fold — by force if necessary, by persuasion if possible.

Taiwan, one of Asia's economic successes for decades and now a center of high-tech development, has turned in a mixed performance under Ma. Unemployment has fallen in the past two years after reaching a high of 6.16 percent in 2009, and preliminary growth figures for 2011 were a respectable 4.5 percent. But housing prices in urban areas have skyrocketed and the income gap has widened, as large companies that invested in the China trade have profited handsomely from new opportunities.

Taipei office worker Chen Yen-fen said she voted for Tsai because she appeared to be a capable leader.

"A change of government will help resolve the widening gap between the rich and poor and many other problems," she said.

In the closing days of the campaign Tsai moved toward the center, promising to open a channel to China to offer assurances that she had no intention of embracing the pro-independence policies of Ma's predecessor, the DPP's Chen Shui-bian. Chen's policies infuriated Beijing, and caused great consternation in the U.S., Taiwan's most important security partner.

Ma had been buoyed by the arrival of an estimated 300,000 China-based Taiwanese businesspeople, most of whom are expected to vote for the president. Many Taiwanese businesses on the mainland are big Ma backers and have encouraged their workers to support him.

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