Opposition lawmakers yesterday voted to extend the legislative session for two months to July 31, prompting accusations from the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) that they were attempting to avoid recall votes.
DPP caucus chief executive Rosalia Wu (吳思瑤) said that “everyone knows” why the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) is seeking to extend the session, given the fear of recalls among KMT lawmakers.
The DPP would support extending the session for bills that benefit the country and people’s livelihoods, but not for the benefit of the KMT, Wu said.
Photo: Lo Pei-de, Taipei Times
While the country faces increased tariffs from the US and people hope for change, DPP lawmakers want to take a vacation, KMT Legislator Wang Hung-wei (王鴻薇) said.
The DPP has yet to grant Taiwan’s workers more holiday leave, yet its lawmakers want to take a two-month vacation, Wang said.
That would be the longest extension in the history of the Legislative Yuan, DPP Legislator Wang Ting-yu (王定宇) said on Facebook.
Lawmakers who only work when they are in session “have a very easy life,” he added.
The KMT proposal stems from the party’s fear of the recall movement and intention to shelter under the “protective umbrella” of the Legislative Yuan, DPP Legislator Jean Kuo (郭昱晴) wrote on Facebook, asking which bills justified an extended session.
The Legislative Yuan could also seek an extraordinary session rather than extending the current session, Kuo said.
Meanwhile, opposition lawmakers yesterday passed a proposal to hold a referendum over restarting the Ma-anshan Nuclear Power Plant in Pingtung County, the last nuclear facility to be decommissioned in Taiwan.
The Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) and the KMT passed the bill in a vote split down party lines.
The Central Election Commission would be tasked with holding the referendum.
Taiwan on Sunday began the permanent deactivation of the plant’s No. 2 nuclear reactor, the nation’s final operational unit.
This referendum, one of the two proposed on April 18 by the TPP, asks if the public agrees that the Ma-anshan plant should be kept operational, assuming authorities certify its safety.
The other bill asks if voters agree that the government should legalize voting by absentee ballot in the Republic of China’s “free territories.”
Left-Handed Girl (左撇子女孩), a film by Taiwanese director Tsou Shih-ching (鄒時擎) and cowritten by Oscar-winning director Sean Baker, won the Gan Foundation Award for Distribution at the Cannes Critics’ Week on Wednesday. The award, which includes a 20,000 euro (US$22,656) prize, is intended to support the French release of a first or second feature film by a new director. According to Critics’ Week, the prize would go to the film’s French distributor, Le Pacte. "A melodrama full of twists and turns, Left-Handed Girl retraces the daily life of a single mother and her two daughters in Taipei, combining the irresistible charm of
A Philippine official has denied allegations of mistreatment of crew members during Philippine authorities’ boarding of a Taiwanese fishing vessel on Monday. Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) spokesman Nazario Briguera on Friday said that BFAR law enforcement officers “observed the proper boarding protocols” when they boarded the Taiwanese vessel Sheng Yu Feng (昇漁豐號) and towed it to Basco Port in the Philippines. Briguera’s comments came a day after the Taiwanese captain of the Sheng Yu Feng, Chen Tsung-tun (陳宗頓), held a news conference in Pingtung County and accused the Philippine authorities of mistreatment during the boarding of
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is pushing for residents of Kinmen and Lienchiang counties to acquire Chinese ID cards in a bid to “blur national identities,” a source said. The efforts are part of China’s promotion of a “Kinmen-Xiamen twin-city living sphere, including a cross-strait integration pilot zone in China’s Fujian Province,” the source said. “The CCP is already treating residents of these outlying islands as Chinese citizens. It has also intensified its ‘united front’ efforts and infiltration of those islands,” the source said. “There is increasing evidence of espionage in Kinmen, particularly of Taiwanese military personnel being recruited by the
88.2 PERCENT INCREASE: The variants driving the current outbreak are not causing more severe symptoms, but are ‘more contagious’ than previous variants, an expert said Number of COVID-19 cases in the nation is surging, with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) describing the ongoing wave of infections as “rapid and intense,” and projecting that the outbreak would continue through the end of July. A total of 19,097 outpatient and emergency visits related to COVID-19 were reported from May 11 to Saturday last week, an 88.2 percent increase from the previous week’s 10,149 visits, CDC data showed. The nearly 90 percent surge in case numbers also marks the sixth consecutive weekly increase, although the total remains below the 23,778 recorded during the same period last year,