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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Yu Shyi-kun

Wikipedia

 
Image:Yu_Shyi-kun.png|right|Yu Shyi-kun
Yu Shyi-kun (游錫堃 pinyin: Y?u X?kūn) (born April 25, 1948), a Taiwanese politician of the Democratic Progressive Party, has been Premier of the Republic of China since February 1, 2002.

Born in Taihe Village (太和村), Dongshan, Yilan|Dongshan Township (冬山鄉), Yilan County, Taiwan Province, Yu was raised in a poor tenant farming family. When he was 13, his house was destroyed by flood waters during Typhoon Pamela and his father died of tuberculosis in the same year. He quit junior high school to work full-time on his family farm.

At 19, he studied at the supplementary night school of the Lotung Commercial High School. He moved to Taipei to enroll in the supplementary school of the Hsihu Commercial and Industrial High School. He studied international commerce at the Chihlee Institute of Technology|Chih Lee College of Business (致理商專) and public administration at the National Chunghsing University. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in politics in Tunghai University in 1985 at the age of 37.

In 1981 he was elected a member of the Taiwan Provincial Assembly for Yilan County. Yu, Su Tseng-chang, and Hsieh San-sheng made the so-called "iron triangle" in the Assembly. The three were the only members ever to resign from that body.

From 1983 to 1984 he was the Tangwai Secretary-General. He became Convener of Tangwai National Election Backing Committee in 1986. As a founding member of the Democratic Progressive Party, he was a member of its Central Committee from 1984 to 1986 and its Central Standing Committee from 1986 to 1990 when he was elected a Magistrate of Ilan County, during which he was a member of the Educational Reform Committee of the Executive Yuan from 1994 to 1996. In his second term of magistrate, Environmental Protection (環保立縣), Tourism (觀光立縣), Information Promotion (資訊立縣), and Culture (文化立縣) were his four main goals in administration. The successful planning and execution let him ranked the first one of 27 mayors/magistrates in Taiwan. After the completion of his two terms as magistrate in 1997, he was in 1998 appointed Chairman of the Taipei Rapid Transit Corporation by Mayor Chen Shui-bian. He resigned in 1999 to become Secretary-General of the Democratic Progressive Party.

He was the chief spokesman for the DPP campaign in the ROC presidential election, 2000|2000 presidential election. With Chen Shui-bian's election to the president of the Republic of China|presidency, he was appointed Vice Premier of the ROC under Premier Tang Fei.

In July 2000, four construction workers were trapped by the rising floodwaters of Pachang Creek. As local and central government authorities squabbled for three hours over who would send out a rescue helicopter, the men drowned. In the public outrage that ensued, officials up the Premier Tang tendered their resignations. Vice Premier Yu, who was also chairman of the Committee of Disaster Relief and Prevention, had his resignation accepted.

Six months later, Yu rejoined the administration as Secretary-General to the Office of the President and served until his promotion to the premiership.

As premier, he defended the administration's position on the ROC referendum, 2004|peace referendum and promoted a NT$610.8 billion arms procurement package in 2004. He caused some minor controversy when he used the designation "Taiwan, ROC" on an official visit to Honduras. Chen later said he preferred "Taiwan." In September 2004, he directed the government to refer to the People's Republic of China in official documents as simply "China" as opposed to "mainland China" or "Communist China" as was previously done in order to highlight a "separate Taiwanese identity." This move was not endorsed by the Presidential Office and the Mainland Affairs Council clarified that it would only apply to internal documents.

Yu is the founder of Kavalan Journal (《噶瑪蘭雜誌》), which is named after the Kavalan Taiwanese aborigines. With Yang Pao-yu, whom he married in 1978, he has two sons.

See also: Politics of Taiwan

Category:1948 births|Yu Shyi-kun
Category:ROC politicians
zh:游錫堃

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Yu Shyi-kun".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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