Presidential elections in Taiwan

The election of the president and vice president of Taiwan (Chinese: 中華民國總統、副總統選舉) is a universal direct election through secret vote by the citizens of Taiwan (ROC) in the Free Area. ROC presidents are elected by relative majority (plurality), meaning the candidate with the most votes wins without a runoff requirement.[1][2] The most recent election took place on January 13, 2024.

  • The Presidential and Vice Presidential Election and Recall Act[3] states that a candidate for president or vice president must be a citizen of the Republic of China, at least 40 years old, and a resident of Taiwan for a period of no less than 15 years with a physical presence of no less than 6 consecutive months.
  • The following persons shall not be registered as candidates for the president:
    • Military personnel
    • Election officials
    • People who hold foreign nationality or who hold residency of the People's Republic of China
    • People who have restored their nationality or acquired their nationality by naturalization
  • The president and vice president are nominated on a joint ticket. Political parties which have gained at least 5% of the votes in the last presidential or legislative election may nominate a set of candidates directly. For example, during the 2012 elections, only the Kuomintang and Democratic Progressive Party were qualified to nominate candidates through this rule. Alternatively, candidates may be nominated by a petition signed by eligible voters numbering no less than 1.5% of the electors in the last legislative election. (This equals 252,848 signatures for the 2012 election.)[3]

List of presidential elections in Taiwan

OrderYearPartyPresidential
candidate
Vice presidential
candidate
Popular vote%
91996 KuomintangLee Teng-huiLien Chan 5,813,69954.00%
Democratic ProgressivePeng Ming-minFrank Hsieh 2,274,58621.13%
IndependentLin Yang-kangHau Pei-tsun 1,603,79014.90%
IndependentChen Li-anWang Ching-feng 1,074,0449.98%
102000 Democratic ProgressiveChen Shui-bianAnnette Lu 4,977,69739.30%
IndependentJames SoongChang Chau-hsiung 4,664,97236.84%
KuomintangLien ChanVincent Siew 2,925,51323.10%
IndependentHsu Hsin-liangJosephine Chu 79,4290.63%
NewLi AoElmer Fung 16,7820.13%
112004 Democratic ProgressiveChen Shui-bianAnnette Lu 6,471,97050.11%
KuomintangLien ChanJames Soong 6,442,45249.89%
122008 KuomintangMa Ying-jeouVincent Siew 7,659,01458.45%
Democratic ProgressiveFrank HsiehSu Tseng-chang 5,444,94941.55%
132012 KuomintangMa Ying-jeouWu Den-yih 6,891,13951.60%
Democratic ProgressiveTsai Ing-wenSu Jia-chyuan 6,093,57845.63%
IndependentJames SoongLin Ruey-shiung 369,5882.77%
142016 Democratic ProgressiveTsai Ing-wenChen Chien-jen 6,894,74456.12%
KuomintangEric ChuWang Ju-hsuan 3,813,36531.04%
People FirstJames SoongHsu Hsin-ying 1,576,86112.84%
152020 Democratic ProgressiveTsai Ing-wenLai Ching-te 8,170,23157.13%
KuomintangHan Kuo-yuChang San-cheng 5,522,11938.61%
People FirstJames SoongSandra Yu 608,5904.26%
162024 Democratic ProgressiveLai Ching-teHsiao Bi-khim 5,586,01940.05%
KuomintangHou Yu-ihJaw Shaw-kong 4,671,02133.49%
Taiwan People'sKo Wen-jeCynthia Wu 3,690,46626.46%

See also

References

  1. "Factbox: How does a Taiwan election work?". Reuters. 2020-01-07. Retrieved 2022-05-11.
  2. Bush, Richard C. (December 18, 2023). "Explaining Taiwan's 2024 presidential election". The Brookings Institution. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  3. "Presidential and Vice Presidential Election and Recall Act".
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