Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04TAIPEI3410
2004-10-29 10:23:00
CONFIDENTIAL
American Institute Taiwan, Taipei
Cable title:  

PFP CLAIMS IT IS STILL IN THE GAME

Tags:  PGOV PREL TW 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TAIPEI 003410 

SIPDIS

STATE PASS AIT/W

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/25/2014
TAGS: PGOV PREL TW
SUBJECT: PFP CLAIMS IT IS STILL IN THE GAME

REF: A. TAIPEI 03031


B. TAIPEI 03299

Classified By: AIT Deputy Director David Keegan, Reasons: 1.4 (B/D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TAIPEI 003410

SIPDIS

STATE PASS AIT/W

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/25/2014
TAGS: PGOV PREL TW
SUBJECT: PFP CLAIMS IT IS STILL IN THE GAME

REF: A. TAIPEI 03031


B. TAIPEI 03299

Classified By: AIT Deputy Director David Keegan, Reasons: 1.4 (B/D)


1. (C) Summary: A confidante of People First Party (PFP)
leader James Soong told AIT that the party has emerged from
an early October KMT attempt at a hostile merger with renewed
vigor. PFP Spokesman Daniel Hwang admitted that the party
was close to collapse in the final days of the registration
period for the December 11 Legislative Yuan (LY) election.
He also acknowledged that Soong and other senior party
leaders had been mentally disengaged for the past six months.
However, Hwang said that Soong has regained his senses and
asserted that the KMT now has no choice but to work with the
PFP if it wants a shot at maintaining a Pan-Blue LY majority
in December. Other PFP insiders are less upbeat, noting that
the party remains deeply divided internally and distrustful
of the KMT. End Summary.

PFP's Near-Death Experience
--------------


2. (C) James Soong confidante Daniel Hwang (Yih-jiau) told
AIT October 20 that the People First Party (PFP) has overcome
its crisis of confidence and that the party is heading into
the final stretch of the LY election with renewed vigor and
energy. Hwang admitted that pressure on the party was
enormous after PFP Legislators Lee Ching-an and Lee Ching-hua
publicly called for merger with the KMT by October 10. He
alleged that the situation was made worse by "some elements
of the KMT" who wanted to marginalize the PFP by portraying
the party as obstructing Pan-Blue unity. However, Hwang
said, PFP members stood firm by their commitment to the
party, and no open rebellion occurred. He said October 10
was the watershed, and when 41 LY candidates registered by
the October 12 deadline to run under the PFP banner, everyone
in the PFP knew they had "braved the storm." Hwang said that
party Chairman Soong has also finally emerged from the mental
haze that he has lived in since March 20 and is ready to lead
the party into the December 11 election.


3. (C) After the KMT's failed attempt at a "hostile takeover"
by marginalizing Soong, Hwang told AIT that the PFP came back
with a proposal to finalize a negotiated merger by the end of
October. While the KMT rejected the initiative, Hwang

pointed out that the KMT has done the math and now realizes
that even if every one of the 85 KMT and New Party nominees
got elected, they would still be short of a working majority.
Hwang asserted that 31 of the 41 PFP nominees are in safe
seats, and that with those numbers, the KMT and PFP
supporters cannot abandon the PFP. He said that the KMT and
PFP expect to sign a letter of intent to complete the
integration by February 2005. Hwang explained that such a
letter would give Pan-Blue supporters the impression that
there is cooperation, stability and unity among the KMT, PFP,
and New Party. He admitted that the Pan-Blue does not have a
LY election campaign chairman, and that each party has its
own campaign mechanism, but he dismissed campaign
coordination as unnecessary. He said, "our unity is symbolic
and that is enough," adding "Chinese people are not
meticulous."

Resurrected or Placed on Life-Suport?
--------------


4. (C) Hwang's confidence in his party, however, is not
shared by many of his colleagues. Many of James Soong's
other advisors find it difficult to talk to Soong these days,
saying that Soong prone to burst into fits of rage. PFP
Public Affairs Deputy Director Liao Wen-chang told AIT that
he tries to go through Soong's wife whenever he needs to
report something to Soong. Former PFP International Affairs
Director Raymond Wu told AIT that PFP Vice Chairman Chang
Chau-hsiung has totally detached himself from party
operations, and Secretary General Tsai Chung-hsiung has
returned to the United States disgusted with intra-party
infighting. Wu told AIT that Acting Secretary General Chin
Ching-sheng, now charged with running party operations, is a
former KMT "organization man" who is not trusted by Soong and
is not part of his inner circle. Although Chin has been
designated as the liaison to the KMT, Wu said he does not
know how he can fulfill his duties since he has had a
long-standing feud with KMT Secretary General Lin Fong-cheng,
the PFP's main point of contact. As for the PFP's activist
LY Caucus Leader Liu Wen-hsiung, Wu said "he is nothing more
than a gangster."


5. (C) When pressed on the PFP's problems, Hwang admitted
that things could be better. Hwang acknowledged that Soong
remains "bitter and angry," but Hwang said he has worked very
hard to calm Soong down and Soong is "better now." Hwang
said that Vice Chairman Chang's detachment stemmed from his
opposition to merger talks with the KMT and attributed Tsai's
disappearance to the SecGen's inability to get along with
others in the party leadership. While acknowledging that
acting SecGen Chin has many drawbacks, Hwang asserted that he
is loyal and obedient, adding that "these qualities are good
enough."

Comment: Party of Convenience
--------------


6. (C) The PFP as an organized political force has largely
ceased to exist in the wake of the physical and/or mental
disengagement of its senior leadership. Thus far, this has
not eliminated the PFP from contention in the upcoming
election. Those PFP candidates with high personal name
recognition, perhaps not Hwang's 31 but at least two dozen,
appear to be holding ground in public opinion polls, making a
New Party-style collapse unlikely. However, without strong
direction from the top, the PFP has evolved into an
incoherent mix of moderates like spokesman Hwang, radical
bomb-throwers like Caucus Leader Liu, and non-ideological
political operators like acting SecGen Chin. What held these
disparate groups together in the past was their shared
loyalty to Soong and expectations that this loyalty would
result in rewards once the Pan-Blue came to power. With
Soong's political career in tatters, this contract has broken
down and for many in the PFP, the question of returning to
the KMT, likely on KMT terms, is now only a matter of when,
not if.
PAAL