mèþru wrote: ↑Wed Mar 13, 2019 8:49 am
What happened that made her so unpopular?
Cutting civil servant pensions while approving a huge spending plan.
The government would have a solid argument if it enters full austerity mode, but the selective treatment pissed a lot of current and retired government employees off. Although they are mostly KMT supporters to begin with, so this one probably didn't contribute much.
And before the reform, the civil servant pension fund would last about another decade, while labor pension fund is projected to go under in 7 years, yet the government didn't address the latter with the same eagerness as the former.
Weird choice of people in the government
Some are plain dumb: Tsai made one of her cousin the Minister of Labor during a series of controversial Labor Standards Act amendments. While she is a experienced civil servant, she has no portfolio in labor affairs, and during press conferences she only gave unhelpful formulaic responses. After she resigned due to "health reasons", she was immediately made the CEO of a state enterprise, but media backlash forced her to resign the very next day.
Some seems to be bribes: Many activists entered the government during the current administration. While it seemed to be a good direction, people found that most of the usual protester organizations during Ma administration don't show up anymore when the Tsai administration is pushing similarly controversial bills. And there were some grossly incompetent people as well.
The most notorious one was the CEO of Taipei Agricultural Products Marketing Corporation, a partially state- and municipal-owned business, Wu Yinning (Pinyin, probably not the official spelling). She was a writer and agrarian activist, and not the champagne variant - she went to Mexico to interview the Zapatistas once. Unfortunately, she didn't appear to have the necessary knowledge. When a Taipei City councilor questioned her if she can read the company's financial statement, she answered that she was "learning to", and she was memed as the "$2.5 million NTD intern" (~$83,000 USD, about 5 times the average Taiwanese yearly income)
And there are ones with clear ulterior motives: The former Magistrate of Hualian County was convicted of insider trading when he was in another position. Because it happened a few months before the November election, the remaining term was less than two years and the central government may appoint an acting magistrate to serve the rest of the term. Now usually the appointee would be from the same party, is already a deputy magistrate, or at the very least have the experience of being a mayor or magistrate, but instead the person DPP appointed is a Deputy Minister of Justice. Basically everyone knew that he was sent to dug up dirt in the Hualian County Government instead of doing his job, and he failed to find anything in the end.
Another issue is the "professional resigners", people designated to take the fall and resign, but appointed to a higher position a few months later after things died down. This was pretty pointless, and makes the resignation look insincere and irresponsible. The chairman of the state-run CPC (formerly called Chinese Petroleum Corporation) resigned after a natural gas power plant maintenance accident that caused island-wide blackout. Less than 3 months later, he was appointed the acting magistrate of Yilan Country, though he was at least a legislator from Yilan once.
After the Kaohsiung gas explosion accident in 2014, Wu Hong-mo, the deputy mayor of Kaohsiung (and a few others) resigned. While it happened only months before the election, the DPP mayor was successfully reelected, and the people who resigned came back again. Now that we still acceptable, but he keeps getting promoted and last year, he became the Minister of Transportation, and has the misfortune of witnessing the worst train derailment accident in the history of Taiwan. He resigned again, but now he's known as a meme professional resigner.
There are some miscellaneous ones like the presidential Justice Reformation Committee (can't find the official translation) having a first degree murderer in their ranks. He stabbed his girlfriend to death in broad daylight in the streets in front of her mother, and was sentenced to just 12 years, and served merely 8 years. While he was indeed a lawyer and probably have the necessary knowledge for the job, he's not really a good example of justice, especially not with the actual time he served in comparison of what he has done. There are also a large number of people who committed DUI in the government and party positions, which doesn't help the party's image.
... and there are a lot more problem in other aspects