2005 Taiwanese National Assembly election

2005 Taiwanese National Assembly election

← 1996 14 May 2005 (2005-05-14)[1]

All 300 seats in the ad hoc National Assembly
151 seats needed for a majority
Registered16,750,867
Turnout23.36%
  First party Second party
 
Leader Su Tseng-chang Lien Chan
Party DPP Kuomintang
Leader since 15 February 2005 24 March 2000
Seats won 127 117
Popular vote 1,647,791 1,508,384
Percentage 42.52% 38.92%
Position Pro-amendment Pro-amendment

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Shu Chin-chiang James Soong
Party TSU People First
Leader since 10 January 2005 31 March 2000
Seats won 21 18
Popular vote 273,147 236,716
Percentage 7.05% 6.11%
Position Anti-amendment Anti-amendment

Vote lead by party position by township/city and district

An election for the National Assembly took place in Taiwan on Saturday, 14 May 2005, from 07:30 to 16:00 local time. It elected an ad hoc National Assembly whose only function was to serve as a constituent assembly in order to approve or reject amendments to the Constitution of the Republic of China already proposed by the Legislative Yuan. The results indicated that the amendments would be approved, as the parties supporting them won an overwhelming majority, and indeed the amendments were passed on 7 June 2005.

The election was carried out using purely the party-list proportional representation system. The official campaign period was 07:00 to 22:00 each day from 4 May 2005 to 13 May 2005. Official election broadcasts by the ad hoc coalitions (officially termed 'unions') and (established) parties were provided by the Public Television Service Taiwan on 7 May 2005; several unofficial debates were also arranged. Notably, this election saw the temporary breakdown of the traditional two-coalition system in Taiwanese politics: instead of dividing into the Pan-Green Coalition and Pan-Blue Coalition over the political status of Taiwan, the parties divided themselves into larger and smaller parties, with the larger Democratic Progressive Party and Kuomintang in support of the amendments and the smaller People First Party and Taiwan Solidarity Union against them.

  1. ^ "中選會資料庫網站". cec.gov.tw (in Chinese). Retrieved 29 January 2020.

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