China Taiwan Network, December 29 According to Taiwan's "China Times News Network", the Democratic Progressive Party held a regular meeting on the 28th to announce a failure review report. In addition to mentioning black gold and public security issues, the reasons for the defeat were also the failure to stop the bleeding in time in the thesis case of former Hsinchu Mayor Lin Zhijian. Lin Zhuoshui, the former representative of the Democratic Progressive Party, believes that polls showed that when it came to who was responsible for the "nine-in-one" election defeat, the then party chairman Tsai Ing-wen had 44.5%, while Lin Zhijian only had 12.8%. This shows that the gap between the DPP's review and public opinion is really too big.
According to a poll previously released by Taiwan's Dongsen News Cloud, 44.5% of people believe that Tsai Ing-wen should bear the greatest responsibility for the DPP's "nine-in-one" fiasco, followed by Lin Zhijian at 12.8%, Chen Shizhong at 7.9%, and Su Zhenchang at 5.9%.
As one of the parties involved, Lin Zhijian, when he saw that he had become the only "war criminal" named in the DPP's review report, he also said that running for mayor of Taoyuan was not in his life plan. In this regard, Lin Zhuoshui ridiculed, "Who loves you so much that I have to single you out?"
Lin Zhuoshui said bluntly that from the polls conducted on the island, it is obvious that Tsai Ing-wen should be the culprit for the defeat, but the DPP's review is very different from the public opinion. Now it's up to Lin Zhijian to admit his mistake and stop the bleeding, but where is the real initiator? "This is why when Tsai Ing-wen handed over the review responsibility to Taoyuan Mayor Zheng Wencan, he would blurt out, 'It's hard for me.'"
Regarding the DPP's so-called "reflection on defeat", even netizens on the island couldn't stand it, and responded one after another, "Lin Zhijian's inner thought at this time is that no one has to shoulder it, and blame me. The biggest one can't come out, so the smallest one can only be sacrificed." (Editor/Yin Sainan, reviewer/Li Botao)