Although President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) has access to ample party and government  resources allowing him to issue both threats and promises, he stumbled in  Saturday’s legislative by-elections. This will have an impact on the year-end  special municipality elections, and it also shows that Ma no longer has the  ability to arouse enthusiasm among pan-blue supporters — voter turnout on  Saturday was less than 40 percent — who no longer feel that supporting Ma gives  them a sense of mission. 
Some voters have said they “feel nothing.” This  has created an atmosphere in which pan-blue supporters feel they must abandon Ma  to save the pan-blue camp, and some are beginning to talk about supporting  Taichung Mayor Jason Hu (胡志強).
When Ma won the presidential election on  the back of 7.65 million votes, his campaign team proclaimed: “Ma does not rely  on the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT), the party relies on Ma.” They implied  KMT officials and party workers were not worth much and were in great need of  “reform and renewal.” 
For example, when KMT Secretary-General King  Pu-tsung (金浦聰) brought in Ryan Wu (吳睿穎) to “reform” the personnel  administration, he just fumbled in the dark and even made a big affair of  recalling many heads of county and city branches to party headquarters where  they were punished for not working hard enough during the  elections.
Outspoken KMT Legislator Lo Shu-lei (羅淑蕾) said King thought  “he had dug up treasure [in Wu], but he really only dug up a pile of  shit.”
The problem is that after Ma and King teamed up and started  playing up reform, their calls seemed to lack concrete content or direction.  They have also failed to return the party’s stolen assets. Everything remained  words on paper, which made the call for reform seem more like a slogan and an  excuse for a purge.
In their attempts at manipulating local elections,  party branches simply used Ma’s people. Some candidates were “parachuted” in  while others were local candidates, and this was a cause of conflict that  stirred up much ill feeling and instilled a sense of crisis in powerful local  faction leaders because they were part of Ma and King’s “reform” target. Small  wonder that there wasn’t much unity.
Ma’s inability to govern and his  lackluster results have made life difficult for the public. Unemployment has  gone up, civic order is deteriorating and the government is incapable of  satisfying voters’ demands. The government’s pro-China policies lack vision, and  this is frequently the reason the public calls for change. 
The lack of  direction has meant that there has been no structure to reforms. The  reorganization of the Presidential Office, the Cabinet and the party has turned  these institutions into a campaign team, only with some temporary make-up  applied. The election organization is the only part that has been given some  thorough thought, and there is a lack of comprehensive political considerations.  Consideration is given only to the interests of big business and those whose  business involves both sides of the Taiwan Strait. 
This does not go  unnoticed by voters, so when there is an election, they of course want to teach  the government a lesson so that it understands what the public want, which is  placing Taiwan first.
In short, the biggest defeat for Ma’s oligarchical  rule is that the KMT no longer knows for whom or what it is fighting, while  those who are afraid of becoming completely dominated by China no longer know  where Taiwan’s future lies. It is not very strange that we are now hearing cries  of “We love the emperor, but we love Rome more” from within the  KMT.
Lu I-ming is a former publisher and president of the Taiwan  Shin Sheng Daily News.
TRANSLATED BY PERRY SVENSSON 
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2010/03/02
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