Following the ruckus last month in which the government took the public and the  legislature by surprise with its sudden announcement that it was lifting a ban  on US bone-in beef imports, the government did it again on Monday night: It  blitzed the public and lawmakers with a declaration that it had signed a  financial memorandum of understanding (MOU) with China.
Both dealings  followed an extremely disturbing pattern, in which government officials by day  appeared all ears at public hearings and legislative meetings, saying they were  interested in gathering input from the public and lawmakers before they would  proceed with the issues they had at hand — only to have the government announce  deals sealed in black and white later the same night.
These two incidents  highlighted not just the degree to which the government holds the public and the  legislature in contempt, but also accentuated President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) and  Premier Wu Den-yih’s (吳敦義) lack of credibility. Prior to Monday, Ma and Wu had  repeatedly said that the contents of the planned MOU would be submitted to the  legislature for review and that the government would conduct negotiations in  accordance with “the guiding principle of pursuing the public’s support and the  legislature’s oversight” before signing the MOU.
It says much about the  government’s regard for public support and legislative scrutiny that officials  found themselves needing to make guarded dealings at night, shying away from  broad daylight.
Financial Supervisory Commission Chairman Sean Chen (陳冲)  said both sides exchanged signed documents at 6pm on Monday. If the MOU had met  with public approval and passed lawmakers’ appraisal as the president and the  premier had promised, wouldn’t it have been a celebratory matter? Wouldn’t the  government have held a press conference early in the morning with festive  aplomb, instead of releasing a public announcement on the inking of the MOU at a  press conference at a time when most government agencies closed for the  day?
From the opaque manner in which the government conducted  negotiations with other countries in the recent US beef and MOU talks and the  way in which it ambushed its people with sudden announcements after the fact, it  would come as no surprise if we were to wake up one day to find that the  government had already signed an economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA)  with China despite the lack of domestic consensus on the matter.
Public  discourse and debate on issues that pertain to public welfare and national  interests is an essential feature in a democracy. Regrettably, as is evident  from the government’s recent displays of arrogant obliviousness to public  opinion and legislative oversight in its dealings on matters of great importance  to the public’s welfare and interests, it appears that one-party dominance,  about which many have expressed concern, is slowly taking hold, with the  legislature becoming ineffective in its role of keeping the executive branch in  check.
Taiwan’s democracy has been lauded by many, at home and abroad,  including by Ma himself. It is hoped that the next chapter of Taiwan’s success  story would not have an unfortunate twist in which the government conceals an  autocratic character by means of a pseudo-democratic cover.
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2009/11/19
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