
Pro-China and pro-independence opposition parties share thoughts on National Day
Though organizers intend the National Day celebrations to foster unity in Taiwan, criticism from opposition parties abounds. On the pro-China side of the political spectrum, officials from parties such as the KMT have protested that this year’s official National Day logo makes no mention of the R.O.C., or Republic of China, which is Taiwan’s official name. KMT Party Chair Eric Chu says its absence is proof that the Tsai administration is taking Taiwan on the road to independence. Meanwhile, the Taiwan Statebuilding Party, which advocates for Taiwan’s separation from the R.O.C., says Oct. 10 is not actually a day for Taiwan to celebrate. The party says Taiwan’s true national day will be whenever Taiwan becomes independent from the R.O.C.
Holding up national flags, KMT Chair Eric Chu leads party members in wishing the R.O.C. a happy birthday. The KMT on Monday held a National Day flag-raising ceremony of its own at its party headquarters. The event was attended by former President Ma Ying-jeou, former Taipei mayors Wu Po-hsiung 吳伯雄 and Hau Lung-pin, and Taipei mayoral candidate Chiang Wan-an among many others. Together, they protested that the official logo for this year’s celebrations did not include the words “R.O.C.”
Eric Chu
KMT chair
The R.O.C. exists. We all exist here together. Defending the R.O.C. is our shared responsibility. We say no to the DPP’s daily attempts to make the R.O.C. invisible, and to eventually destroy it.
Ma Ying-jeou
Former president
The Tsai administration promoted this as the “Taiwan National Day.” The words “R.O.C.” are gone. The only way to change this precarious status quo, is by changing the government, and changing its policies.
Ma once protested the branding of this year’s National Day logo, saying that leaving out the words “R.O.C.” from the design was a DDP “Taiwan independence” tactic. After the flag-raising ceremony at the KMT headquarters, he and Chu headed to the official event at the Presidential Office. Ma chose to forgo the face masks with the official National Day logo, wearing ones with a pattern of national flags instead.
Tsai Ing-wen
President
The work of making the Republic of China, Taiwan, a more resilient country
Ma joined the rest of the officials in applauding after Tsai referred to Taiwan by its official name. At the event grounds, Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je said that the R.O.C. was still the biggest common denominator in Taiwan. Meanwhile, the Taiwan Statebuilding Party on Monday held a press conference saying that the current National Day celebrations are not actually celebrating Taiwan.
Wang Hsing-huan
Taiwan Statebuilding Party
Oct. 10 is not the National Day for the people of Taiwan. What year was it that Taiwan was founded on Oct. 10? The R.O.C. is celebrating its 111th anniversary. That marks the founding of China in 1911. In the future, Taiwan’s national day will be a day to celebrate its independence.
The Taiwan Statebuilding Party says that the R.O.C.’s anniversary is not a celebration for Taiwan. Party members say that Taiwan will only truly have a national day of its own after it becomes a separate entity from the R.O.C.
2022-10-10