China Taiwan Network July 17th According to Taiwan's China Times Electronic News, a report recently pointed out that Taiwan's leader Tsai Ing-wen once enthusiastically asked a mayor from the south to go north to "learn to me to learn to be a leader"; former DPP "legislator" Lin Zhuoshui pointed out that if it is true, then it can be seen that the concept of successors is not immune to the vulgarity. But such hope can be easily realized in the traditional feudal era, but it is another matter in the democratic era.
Lin Zhuoshui pointed out that after Taiwan was democratized, although the leaders carefully made arrangements for succession, they never succeeded. First of all, there has been no conclusion on whether former Taiwan leader Lee Teng-hui is Chiang Ching-kuo’s successor. After Lee Teng-hui became the leader in 1988, he arranged for Lien Chan to be his successor very step by step. Unexpectedly, Lien Chan lost the election and failed to succeed. The successor Chen Shui-bian was originally Su Zhenchang when he was in power, but unexpectedly, in the DPP primary election, Su Zhenchang was defeated by Chen Shui-bian's rival Tsai Changting. This was the second failure to arrange succession experience.
Next is Ma Ying-jeou, and the successor he originally arranged was Wu Dun-yi. However, once Ma becomes the leader of the 10 party (10% satisfaction) and becomes the successor of the 10 party leaders, the public opinion satisfaction continues to fall along with the people who cultivate him, and the public opinion satisfaction is comparable to that of Ma. In the end, Wu Dunyi finally gave up the nomination for the Kuomintang leader.
Now it is rumored that Tsai Ing-wen wants a mayor from the south to come to her to learn to be a leader. Lin Zhuoshui said bluntly that this rumor is too inconsistent with the context of the times, not to mention how abrupt it is in the current and current political situation! (China Taiwan Network Gao Xu)