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With its star gone, is it time for the KMT to rethink ties with Beijing?

  • Han Kuo-yu went from the Kuomintang’s great hope to its big disappointment in just two years, as the pro-independence camp gained momentum
  • Beijing’s hardline position on the island is a barrier to peaceful cross-strait links, analysts say

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The Kuomintang might have to come up with a new approach to ties with the mainland, observers say. Photo: Reuters
Less than two years ago, Han Kuo-yu was the great hope of Taiwan’s Beijing-friendly Kuomintang party.
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Running on a platform of economic prosperity for all and playing down the party’s traditional pro-unification views, Han stormed home in a traditional Democratic Progressive Party stronghold to become mayor of Kaohsiung – the island’s second-biggest city – in late 2018.

His win raised hopes within the party that he could be the one to lead them out of the electoral wilderness and forge a path towards better relations with the mainland.

In March 2019, despite no official links across the Taiwan Strait, Han made a rare trip to mainland China and held talks with top officials from the Taiwan Affairs Office.

About a year later, Han was the KMT’s nominee for president, campaigning on a policy of acknowledging that both sides of the Taiwan Strait belonged to one country.

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