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Taipei Times


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# Article Title Author Hits
961 Mask kerfuffle reveals demons Taipei Times Editorial 464
962 Fighting the demon within Taipei Times Editorial 486
963 Rulings are out of scope for Control Yuan checks Chen Mao-hsiung 陳茂雄 451
964 Local politics confuses newcomers Andy Smith 439
965 Trump should set China straight Joseph Bosco 469
966 PRC’s stance unchanged by election Taipei Times Editorial 466
967 The youth can decide their future Huang Yu-zhe 黃于哲 726
968 Possible interference exposed Taipei Times Editorial 493
969 KMT’s ‘green terror’ is a fantasy Shih Ming-hsiung 施明雄 535
970 Claiming equality as a normal state Peng Ming-min 彭明敏 530
971 Facing up to Beijing’s arrogance, ignorance Ted Yoho 526
972 Taiwan, US in sync against China Joseph Bosco 508
973 Using freedom to destroy freedom Lee Hsiao-Feng 李筱峰 504
974 Potter King incident exposes China Gao Jian-ying 高見潁 516
975 Election tour showcases democracy Taipei Times Editorial 462
976 Beware trap of opinion polls aimed at policies Chen Mao-hsiung 陳茂雄 501
977 Cross-party, democratic renewal Ian Inkster 音雅恩 546
978 Han, Wu are the last two straws for the KMT Ling Po-chih 凌博志 465
979 Beijing fueling anti-China sentiment Taipei Times Editorial 479
980 Chinese product boycott necessary Taipei Times Editorial 497
 
Page 49 of 145

Newsflash

A National Human Rights preliminary report scheduled to be released by the Presidential Office later this month should include a review of the Referendum Act (公民投票法), which deprives people of their rights, a number of academics said yesterday.

The act, enacted in 2003, has been dubbed “birdcage” legislation because of the unreasonably high threshold needed to launch a referendum drive.

The act stipulates that a referendum proposal, after completing a first stage whereby signatures from 0.5 percent of the number of eligible voters in the previous presidential election have been collected, must obtain approval from the Referendum Review Committee before it can proceed to the next stage, which involves collecting signatures from 5 percent of voters.