196 Politics and international relations
Taiwan, he moderated his calls for immediate formal independence in order not to provoke a military response from Beijing. The DPP was one of the new parties that fi rst registered in 1986 and it has been by far the most successful of the pro-independence groups. In the 2000 election President Chen defeated the GMD candidate Lien Chan, a protégé of former president Lee Teng-hui and an independent contender, James Soong, but his government still did not have a majority in parliament. In the December 2001 parliamentary elections, the GMD lost its parliamentary majority for the fi rst time since 1949. The DPP secured eighty-seven seats in the legislature, the GMD had sixty-eight members and other parties had seventy between them.
China–Taiwan relations and the 1992 consensus
On 24 January 2001, Vice-Premier Qian Qichen of the PRC, who had been a widely respected former Foreign Minister, called on the Taiwan authorities to accept the 1992 consensus on the principle of One China.
In Shanghai, there is a resident Taiwanese community that is at least 300,000 strong and runs its own schools and a newspaper. At the same time, however, direct trade, transport and communications are banned, although there have been moves to relax these restrictions. The economies of China on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are linked closely together but closer economic integration is hampered by the lack of a political accommodation. The role of the Guomindang (GMD) has changed signifi cantly since it went into opposition. In spite of the historical antipathy between the GMD and the CCP, the GMD was prepared to enter into discussions with Beijing and continued to insist on a policy of reunifi cation in the long term in the face of the growing wave of sentiment in favour of independence. However, at a GMD congress that was held in the city of Taoyuan in June 2007, major changes were made to the Constitution of the party, enabling it to concentrate on the island of Taiwan and the ‘people’s welfare’ (the old reformist term used by Sun Yat-sen) rather than having reunifi cation as its main objective. The party leader, Ma Ying-jeou, who was the GMD’s candidate in the presidential elections which were held in 2008, indicated that he would be willing to conclude a peace agreement with the PRC. These moves refl ect the party’s willingness to bow to the contemporary political
This consensus was the result of a meeting between the two organisations established in China and Taiwan to manage cross-straits relations. The Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS –PRC) and the Straits Exchanges Foundation (SEF – Taiwan) met in Hong Kong in 1992. The consensus, which was that both sides should abide by the One China principle, may not have been a consensus at all as the Taiwan side rejected it, but since the rejection came after the election of the pro-independence DPP, the status of this consensus is disputed.3 Political relations between China and Taiwan remain strained but economic relations have developed in a way that belies the degree of cross-straits tension that appears to exist. Taiwanese fi rms have invested heavily in the mainland economy and in 2002 there were at least 50,000 businesses based in the island operating in the PRC.4
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