CARTOON: Tsai Ing-wen Slays the 'One China' Dragon as the World Applauds

What you need to know
World leaders are watching with glee as Tsai Ing-wen takes her turn as Asia's Wonder Woman.
Fresh off humiliating November 2018 regional election losses which saw President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) resign as Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) chairperson, Taiwan’s leader has started off 2019 with a bang.
Tsai gave a clear and forceful policy speech on New Year’s Day, just before Chinese leader Xi Jinping made the indecent proposal of offering Taiwan governance under a Hong Kong-style “one country, two systems” framework.
Tsai, often accused of vacillating on cross-Strait matters in the past, wasted no time in issuing a strong rejection of Xi’s offer. Her determination won her plaudits among Taiwanese of all political orientations along with policymakers across the globe. Naturally, this included Taiwan’s 17 remaining formal diplomatic allies, such as Belize:
Belize🇧🇿 strongly supports Taiwan🇹🇼 to safeguard its sovereignty and democracy, and to have its voice heard in the international community.#StandWithTaiwan #SpeakUpforTaiwan pic.twitter.com/iLXzxOUtN2
— Belize MFA 🇧🇿 (@MFABelize) January 9, 2019
It also included a bevy of supportive U.S. congresspeople:
Xi Jinping’s threatening rhetoric on #Taiwan is an escalation of Communist Party campaign to marginalize Taiwan’s democracy. Taiwans’s legitimacy is a self-evident fact, and Congress’ support remains unwavering.
— Ted Yoho (@RepTedYoho) January 4, 2019
The U.S. must stand with Taiwan - a key democratic ally and friend - and call for a return to peaceful and productive cross-Strait relations.
— Rep. Vicente Gonzalez (@RepGonzalez) January 4, 2019
There is little downside for U.S. legislators in signaling support for Taiwan – they are unburdened by the diplomatic rhetorical restrictions faced by the executive branch. However, senior White House official Garrett Marquis joined the fray, condemning Beijing’s “coercion” and urging China to resume dialogue with Taiwan:
Beijing should stop its coercion & resume dialog w/ the democratically-elected administration on Taiwan https://t.co/GPxtHp9mFn 2/2
— Garrett Marquis (@GMarquis45) January 5, 2019
French parliamentarian Jean-Francois Cesarini denounced Xi Jinping’s threat of using military force to unify China and Taiwan. Canadian MP Judy Sgro also signaled her support of Taiwan:
As the Chair of the Canada Taiwan Parliamentary Friendship Group I believe its important that Taiwan's sovereignty, democratic institution, & the will of their people be respected. https://t.co/ToRys17R9A Taiwan must have a voice.
— Judy Sgro (@JudySgroMP) January 7, 2019
Catalonia leader Carles Puigdemont thanked Tsai Ing-wen for “using Catalan language” on her Facebook page, although the picture in question was submitted, along with dozens of others, by internet users unaffiliated with the presidential office.
Thank you Mrs President @iingwen for using Catalan language in your statement. We stand by #Taiwan in your struggle for freedom & #selfdetermination
— Carles Puigdemont (@KRLS) January 5, 2019
對台灣總統蔡英文女士在她發表的聲明裏使用加泰羅尼亞語我深表感謝。
我們支持台灣爭取自由和自決權。 https://t.co/6nAFz3gaSA pic.twitter.com/ny8ElWDZrf
The picture drew a rebuke from Shiany Perez-Cheng (鄭夏霓), a Taiwan lecturer at the University of Salamanca and visiting scholar at National Taiwan University (NTU).
#Taiwan Presidential Office @TaiwanPresSPOX HUGE public relations FAIL in Spain. A shoot in its own foot by reinforcing #China’s propaganda campaign in Spain against TWN. Honestly, fire the person who has orchestrated this terrible nonsense https://t.co/VwnD85kI4I pic.twitter.com/eSwLGRjcXM
— Xiani P.Ch. 鄭夏霓 (@Xiani_PCh) January 5, 2019
In September 2018, Perez-Cheng told The News Lens that comparisons between Taiwan and Catalonia, which pursued independence in 2017 under the leadership of the now-exiled Puigdemont, play into the hands of Chinese propaganda:
@TaiwanPresSPOX On this interview I explained why #Taiwan and Catalonia are two completely different issues that bare no basis for comparison https://t.co/zXMrHnbBhj pic.twitter.com/5lOvgjWfq7
— Xiani P.Ch. 鄭夏霓 (@Xiani_PCh) January 5, 2019
Other observers pointed out that Catalans strike a kinship with Taiwanese as the two populations share a desire for self-determination.
However, Perez-Chang has a point. Regardless of how you feel about Catalonia’s right to self-determination, it is not Taiwan, which – despite being recognized by only 17 countries – is effectively independent. The country elects its own leaders, has its own military and uses its own currency. No wonder most Taiwanese prefer to “maintain the status quo” rather than voting to declare independence – currently forbidden by Taiwan’s Referendum Act.
In a November 2018 interview with The News Lens, an organizer in the autonomous region of Rojava in northern Syria told Taiwan it would be making a mistake to seek statehood. Kurdish people in Syria abandoned their own push for international recognition long ago, the organizer said, when they realized “their right to have their own state was a silly thing to want: they would only become oppressed by their own language and by their own brothers… by the nation-state.”
Some members of the DPP are still pushing Tsai to pursue formal independence. However, as Taiwan basks in international support (formal or otherwise), the “deep-Green” faction of the DPP might be well-served to look around the region – at China, Hong Kong and Macau for starters – and remember just how good they have it.
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Editor: Nick Aspinwall (@Nick1Aspinwall)
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