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Home Editorials of Interest Jerome F. Keating's writings Taiwan, As the World Turns in December: Ma Turns to his Spin-doctor King Pu-tsung

Taiwan, As the World Turns in December: Ma Turns to his Spin-doctor King Pu-tsung

The December 5 election results were not a big loss for the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT), but they did show the continuing ineptness of Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou. As both President and KMT Party Chairman, Ma could blame no one else. He put his image on the line as he campaigned heavily throughout the country, and especially so in the County of Yilan where the KMT lost handily. Ma tried to explain it all as a matter of the economy (Ma's campaign promise of 6-3-3 is becoming 3-1-1) but whatever the reasons Ma gave, the outcome was clearly another vote of non-confidence in Ma.

Desperate times call for desperate measures and so Ma with no other tricks in his bag and no substantial policies on deck did what he always has done in the past, try to cover up lack of substance with image. To do this he has appointed King Pu-tsung, his top spin-doctor from the past as secretary-general for the KMT.

Holding a doctorate in journalism King is well-versed in the techniques and tricks of spin. But he also carries a lot of baggage from when he served both as spin-doctor and hatchet man for Ma in the past. With many enemies as well as many being aware of King's past heavy-handed manipulation of the press, King will not have an easy time of it.

Stay tuned Taiwan, it is too early to predict any outcome, but all had better brace themselves for a barrage of fluff and mud-slinging. With his hired gun King in place, Ma will try to distance himself and claim the high ground. It won't be pretty. Be prepared Taiwan.

Source:
Jerome F. Keating's writings



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Newsflash


Protesters, including members of the Youth Alliance Against Media Monsters and other civic groups, demonstrate outside the Legislative Yuan in Taipei yesterday against the Next Media Group buyout deal.
Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times

Hundreds of young Taiwanese from around the nation yesterday continued to put pressure on the government to act against media monopolization and reject the sale of the Next Media Group’s (壹傳媒集團) Taiwanese businesses to two consortiums with a six-hour protest outside the Joint Government Office Building, where officials from the Fair Trade Commission (FTC) and academics were holding a public hearing on the sale.