ASSESSMENTS
Taiwan Enters a High-Stakes Campaign Season
Jun 14, 2019 | 21:22 GMT

Supporters of Han Kuo-yu show their enthusiasm for the populist mayor of Kaohsiung City during a campaign event in Taipei on June 1. Han is one of several candidates competing to win the presidential nomination of the main opposition Kuomintang party.
(DANIEL SHIH/AFP/Getty Images)
Highlights
- With presidential hopefuls holding divergent views over the government's relations with China, Taiwan's elections in January will have a deciding effect on cross-strait relations over the next four years and beyond.
- Taiwan's ruling party and its presidential candidate, incumbent Tsai Ing-wen, will ramp up pro-independence narratives to muster public support ahead of next year's vote.
- Beijing will be under pressure to respond to pro-independent narratives, and tensions around the Taiwan Strait will escalate in the coming months if Washington advances proposed arms sales, passes pro-Taiwan bills and elevates the level of official visits with Taipei.
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