The Executive Yuan's Referendum Review Committee late last night voted down the  Taiwan Solidarity Union's (TSU) request to hold a referendum on the government's  proposed economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA) with China. The vote,  which was announced shortly before 11pm, was 12-4.
The TSU's application  requested a referendum on the question: “Do you agree that the government should  sign an ECFA with China?”
“The reason stated for the referendum proposal  is to ask if the government has the right to sign an ECFA. However, the question  asked in the proposal is about the contents of an ECFA, which is different from  the stated reason,” Referendum Review Committee Chairman Chao Yung-mao (趙永茂)  told a press conference after the five-hour meeting. 
The committee had  convened at 6pm.
Chao said a referendum proposal should be aimed at  changing the status quo, but the government would not have to take any action to  change its policy, even if the proposed referendum had passed, because of the  wording — asking whether voters agree with the government’s plan to sign an  ECFA.
“The referendum proposal, therefore, does not meet the  qualification of ‘approving a government policy,’ as stated in the Referendum  Act (公民投票法),” he said. 
The TSU may appeal the decision, he said.  
The committee has 21 members, but only 19 attended the meeting. As  chairman, Chao did not vote because he presided over the meeting, while  committee member Arthur Ding (丁仁方) left before the vote. Of the 17 members who  voted, one cast a blank vote.
The four committee members who voted in  favor of the proposal were Yang Wan-ying (楊婉瑩), Chen Tun-yuan (陳敦源), Kuo  Lin-yung (郭林勇) and Chen Miao-fen (陳妙芬). 
“The referendum proposal asks  whether the government should sign an ECFA with China. It is certainly asking  for the people’s approval on a major policy, which meets the criteria of the  right to hold a referendum as granted by the Constitution,” the four said in a  written statement. 
The committee's rejection was immediately criticized  by TSU Chairperson Huang Kun-huei (黃昆輝), who said the committee had no right to  write off a referendum proposal supported by more than 200,000  people.
The TSU said it would immediately begin preparations for another  referendum proposal, but gave no details.
“An ECFA has to be put to a  public vote,” Huang said. “If Ma, as a popularly elected president, doesn’t  listen to the public, he will pay the price politically.”
“If an ECFA  would benefit Taiwan as the government says, why is Ma afraid of putting this  proposal to a public vote? What is he afraid of?” Huang said.
Premier Wu  Den-yih (吳敦義) had previously said the government respects the people's right to  referendums, as long as they are held legally and constitutionally. However, the  TSU initiative did not meet those requirements, since the content of the  proposed pact has not been announced, he said.
Huang also said the TSU  would prepare an initiative for a referendum asking voters to dismiss the review  committee, saying the committee did not have the moral authority to make  decisions about a right protected by the Constitution.
In addition, the  TSU would investigate the possibility of holding a referendum on revising the  Referendum Act, which sets an unfairly high threshold for referendum questions  to pass, he said.
The Referendum Act stipulates that a referendum  proposal, after completing the first stage of collecting signatures from 0.5  percent of the number of people who were eligible to vote in the last  presidential election, must obtain approval from the Referendum Review Committee  before it can proceed to the next stage of collecting signatures from 5 percent  of that same number. It must then pass a second review before making it to the  polling stations.
Huang also hinted at Chinese involvement in the  decision. He said the committee’s decision came after the government came under  pressure from Chinese authorities.
A TSU source said the party still has  about 100,000 signed petition forms left over from its initial application. A  total of 86,000 signatures are needed to initiate a referendum  process.
TSU officials said they would try and use the remaining forms to  initiate another referendum proposal. However, it was not immediately clear  whether the Referendum Review Committee would accept the forms because the law  says the same referendum proposal cannot be submitted twice.
Democratic  Progressive Party (DPP) spokesman Lin Yu-chang (林右昌) said the committee decision  was regrettable and raised concerns that the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) had  pressured committee members over their decision. 
During the committee  meeting at the Joint Central Government Officers Tower in Taipei, DPP lawmakers  tried to break into the venue by climbing over the fence and metal gates  surrounding the building. Police officers rushed to stop the lawmakers,  triggering scuffles and clashes. 
The lawmakers were able to breach the  police’s first line of defense, but were stopped in front of the building’s  glass doors. The police shut down elevators to prevent protesters from getting  into the building through the underground parking garage and reaching the room  on the 10th floor where the committee was deliberating.
Prevented from  reaching the committee, the DPP lawmakers held a sit-down protest  outside.
Lin said the DPP would most likely hold a provisional meeting  this morning and issue a formal statement after it receives a copy of the  committee’s decision. 
The DPP’s event in support of a referendum on an  ECFA, scheduled for Kaohsiung City’s Glory Pier tomorrow, will go ahead as  planned.
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/06/04



 









