President of the Republic of China

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
President of the
Republic of China

Flag of the Republic of China


Incumbent:
Ma Ying-jeou
since: May 20, 2008
Term length Four years, renewable once
Inaugural Sun Yat-sen
as Provisional President of the Republic of China

Chiang Kai-shek
as 1st-term President under the 1947 Constitution
Formation January 1, 1912
May 20, 1948
Website (English) president.gov.tw/en/
The Presidential Building today
The Presidential Building today
Chiang Kai-shek and Li Tsung-jen were elected by the National Assembly to be the first-term president and vice president on May 20, 1948.
Chiang Kai-shek and Li Tsung-jen were elected by the National Assembly to be the first-term president and vice president on May 20, 1948.

The President of the Republic of China (traditional Chinese: 中華民國總統; simplified Chinese: 中华民国总统; Hanyu Pinyin: Zhōnghuá Mínguó Zǒngtǒng; Tongyong Pinyin: JhōngHuá MínGuó JǒngTǒng; Wade-Giles: Chung-Hua Min-Kuo Tsung-T'ung) is the head of state of the Republic of China (ROC) (commonly known as Taiwan since the 1970s). The Republic of China was founded in 1911 governing the whole of China. As a consequence of the Chinese Civil War, however, the ROC has since 1949 lost control of mainland China to the Chinese Communists while still maintaining control of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, Matsu and other islands. Communist Party founded People's Republic of China (PRC) on mainland China claiming to be the sole government of China.

The existing office was created in 1948 under the 1947 Constitution of the Republic of China and is informally referred to as the "President of Taiwan" (traditional Chinese: 臺灣總統; simplified Chinese: 台湾总統).

The PRC does not recognise the existence of the ROC. Until the late 1980s PRC used quotation marks around terms for all official ROC positions and organisations such as "President" and "government" to imply non-recognition, a practice that was reciprocated by the ROC. Since the mid-1990s, the standard term used by the PRC press has been to refer to ROC government as the "Taiwan authority" (traditional Chinese: 臺灣當局; simplified Chinese: 台湾当局) and the ROC President as the "leader of the Taiwan Area" (traditional Chinese: 臺灣地區領導人; simplified Chinese: 台湾地区领导人), in which, both terms are not used in conjunction with quotation marks.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

When the Republic of China was founded in 1912, Sun Yat-sen was elected as the first "provisional president" (臨時大總統) by the provisional Senate, ending thousands of years of imperial rule in China. Sun Yat-sen soon resigned from the office in favor of Yuan Shikai, who formally assumed the office of "President" (大總統, literally "Great President", in contrast with the omission of 'great' in the current title) in 1913. The 1913 Constitution called for a strong presidential system with notable checks on the president by the National Assembly. However, Yuan soon began to assert presidential power, ignoring the National Assembly and later abolishing it altogether. In 1915, Yuan proclaimed himself Emperor of China in a largely unpopular move and was forced to retract his declaration shortly before his death in 1916. With Yuan Shikai's death, China fragmented into warlordism. Vice President Li Yuanhong succeeded Yuan as president and attempted to reassert the constitutional government, but was soon forced to resign by military strongmen. The presidency, though leading an internationally recognized government, was thereafter to be headed by a series of prominent warlords. This presidency ended in 1928 when the Northern Expedition, led by the Kuomintang (KMT) , succeeded in conquering North China.

Sun Yat-sen established a rival (military, not constitutional) government in Guangzhou in 1917 and took the title of "Generalissimo of the Military Government" (海陸軍大元帥, literally "grand marshal of the navy and army"). He was ousted in 1918 but returned again to Guangzhou in 1921. Claiming to restore the Provisional Constitution of the Republic of China, he summoned the members of the original parliament to elect him as president, but since there lacked a quorum, he took the title of "Extraordinary President" (非常大總統). Sun, again expelled from Guangzhou in 1922, returned in 1923 to take the title of "Generalissimo of the Military Government." Sun died in 1925 with no clear successor and leadership of the government, now named the Nationalist Government, rested in a series of Leninist-style dual party and state committees, the most powerful of which was the policy-making Central Executive Committee of the Kuomintang. The government was organized into five branches, with the Executive Yuan, headed by the premier, holding primary administrative authority. The "Chairman of the Nationalist Government," though not given specific presidential powers, took on the functions of a de facto head of state and its official English translation was "President of the National Government of the Republic of China". This form of government under the KMT lasted through the Northern Expedition, which moved the capital to Nanjing and gave the Nationalist Government domestic control and foreign recognition, and the Second Sino-Japanese War, during which the Japanese established puppet Nationalist Governments with almost the identical organizational structure, until the promulgation of a new Constitution in 1947.

Following the Chinese victory in the Second Sino-Japanese War, the Nationalist Government under Chiang Kai-shek was restored in Nanjing and the KMT set out to enact a liberal democratic Constitution in line with the last stage of Sun Yat-sen's three stages of national development. The new Constitution of the Republic of China, promulgated on December 25, 1947, established a five-branch government with the office of president (總統) as head of state. On May 20, 1948, Chiang Kai-shek was formally elected by the National Assembly to be the first term president.

After the KMT lost the Mainland in the Chinese Civil War, the government was evacuated to Taiwan, where the term limits for the President specified in the 1947 constitution were suspended. In 1954, as the term of the first National Assembly were about to expire, the Judicial Yuan ruled that the National Assembly would continue in power until all-China elections could be held. This froze the membership of the National Assembly to representatives elected from the Mainland and prevented local Taiwanese from legislative participation until the early 1970s. The members of the National Assembly continued in their office until 1991, and continued to elect Chiang Kai-Shek as president until his death in 1975. Presidents were elected by the National Assembly until the first Presidential election in 1996.

[edit] Powers

The president is currently selected by a plurality voting direct election of the areas administered by the Republic of China for a term of four years. Before 1991, the president was selected by the National Assembly of the Republic of China for a term of six years.

The Constitution names the president as head of state and commander-in-chief of the military of the Republic of China. The president is responsible for conducting foreign relations, such as concluding treaties, declaring war, and making peace. The president must promulgate all laws and has no right to veto. Other powers of the president include granting amnesty, pardon or clemency, declaring martial law, and conferring honors and decorations.

The President can appoint Senior Advisors (資政) and National Policy Advisors (國策顧問), but they do not form a council. [1][2]

The Constitution does not clearly define whether the president is more powerful than the premier, as it names the Executive Yuan (headed by the premier) as the "highest administrative authority" with oversight over domestic matters while giving the president powers as commander-in-chief of the military and authority over foreign affairs. Prior to his election as president in 1948, Chiang Kai-shek had insisted that he be premier under the new Constitution, while allowing the president (to which Chiang nominated Hu Shih) be a mere figurehead.[2] However, the National Assembly overwhelmingly supported Chiang as president and once in this position, Chiang continued to exercise vast prerogatives as leader and the premiership served to execute policy, not make it. Thus, until the 1980s power in the Republic of China was personalized rather than institutionalized which meant that the power of the president depended largely on who occupied the office. For example, during the tenure of Yen Chia-kan, the office was largely ceremonial with real power in the hands of the Premier of the Republic of China, Chiang Ching-Kuo, and power switched back to the presidency when Chiang became president. After President Lee Teng-hui succeeded Chiang as president in 1988, the power struggle within the KMT extended to the constitutional debate over the relationship between the president and the premier. The first three premiers under Lee, Yu Kuo-hwa, Lee Huan, and Hau Pei-tsun were mainlanders who had initially opposed Lee's ascension to power. The appointment of Lee and Hau were compromises by President Lee to placate conservatives in the KMT. The subsequent appointment of the first native Taiwanese premier Lien Chan was taken as a sign of Lee's consolidation of power. Moreover, during this time, the power of the premier to approve the president's appointments and the power of the Legislative Yuan to confirm the president's choice of premier was removed establishing the president as the more powerful position of the two.

After the 2000 election of Chen Shui-bian as president, the presidency and the Legislative Yuan were controlled by different parties which brought forth a number of latent constitutional issues such as the role of the legislature in appointing and dismissing a premier, the right of the president to call a special session of the legislature, and who has the power to call a referendum. Most of these issues have been resolved through inter-party negotiations.

Bird's eye view of the Presidential Office
Bird's eye view of the Presidential Office

[edit] Succession

The Constitution of the Republic of China gives a short list of persons who will succeed to the presidency if the office of the President of the Republic of China were to become vacant. According to the Constitution, Chapter IV, Article 49:

In case the office of the President should become vacant, the Vice President shall succeed until the expiration of the original presidential term. In case the office of both the President and the Vice President should become vacant, the President of the Executive Yuan shall act for the President; and, in accordance with the provisions of Article 30 of this Constitution, an extraordinary session of the National Assembly shall be convoked for the election of a new President and a new Vice President, who shall hold office until the completion of the term left unfinished by the preceding President. In case the President should be unable to attend to office due to any cause, the Vice President shall act for the President. In case both the President and the Vice President should be unable to attend to office, the President of the Executive Yuan shall act for the President.[3]

As no president of the Executive Yuan (also known as the Premier) has ever succeeded to the presidency under these provisions, the issue of whether he/she would hold the presidency only until a new president and a new vice president may be elected (which appears implied by the article) or whether he/she would hold the presidency for the rest of the term, is untested. It is further untested whether, should the office of the premier be vacant as well, whether, pursuant to Chapter V, Article 55, the vice president of the Executive Yuan (vice premier), who would be acting premier, would act as president.[4] There is currently no constitutional provision for a succession list beyond the possibility that the vice president of the Executive Yuan might succeed to the presidency.

Assuming that the vice president of the Executive Yuan would be third in line for the presidency, the current line of succession is:

  1. Vincent Siew, Vice President of the Republic of China.
  2. Liu Chao-shiuan, President of the Executive Yuan
  3. Paul Chiu (邱正雄), Vice President of the Executive Yuan

Presidential succession has occurred three times under the 1947 Constitution:

  1. President Chiang Kai-shek resigned on January 21, 1949 amid several Communist victories in the Chinese Civil War and was replaced by Vice President Li Tsung-jen as Acting President. However, Chiang continued to wield authority as Director-General of the Kuomintang and Commander of the National Revolutionary Army. Li Tsung-jen lost the ensuing power struggle and fled to the United States in November 1949. Chiang fled with the government to Taiwan in December 1949 and resumed his duties on March 1, 1950.
  2. President Chiang Kai-shek died on April 5, 1975 and was replaced by Vice President Yen Chia-kan who served out the remainder of the term.
  3. President Chiang Ching-kuo died on January 13, 1988 and was replaced by Vice President Lee Teng-hui who served out the remainder of the term and won two more terms on his own right.

[edit] Diplomatic protocol

The diplomatic protocol regarding the President of the ROC is rather complex because of the anomalous political status of Taiwan. In the two dozen or so nations which recognize the ROC as a legitimate government, he is accorded the standard treatment that is given to a head of state. In other nations, he is formally a private citizen, although even in these cases, travel usually meets with strong objections from the People's Republic of China.

The President of ROC has traveled several times to the United States, formally in transit to and from Central America, where a number of countries do recognize the ROC. This system allows the President to visit the United States without the U.S. State Department having to issue a visa. During these trips, the President is not formally treated as a head of state, does not meet U.S. government officials in their official capacities, and does not visit Washington, D.C. However, in these visits, the ROC President invariably meets with staff members from the US government, although these visits are with lower ranking officials in non-governmental surroundings.

In the case of Southeast Asia, the ROC President was able to arrange visits in the early 1990s which were formally private tourist visits, however these have become increasingly infrequent as a result of PRC pressure.

At the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders' summit, the ROC President is forbidden from attending personally and must send a special envoy to represent him at the event.

[edit] Elections


e • d Summary of the 22 March 2008 Republic of China presidential election results
Candidates and nominating parties Votes %
Ma Ying-jeou and Vincent Siew
7,659,014 58.45
Frank Hsieh and Su Tseng-chang
5,444,949 41.55
Total (turnout 76.33%) 13,103,963 100.0

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ 台湾地区领导人选举结束 马英九、萧万长获胜-海峡两岸-人民网
  2. ^ U.S. Department of State, The China White Paper (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1967), 273.

[edit] External links

This article contains Chinese text.
Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters.
Personal tools