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Taiwan's new president will face a divided parliament. Here's why it matters

TAIPEI — Taiwan's president-elect Lai Ching-te will face a split parliament that will likely moderate his policy agenda, with Taiwan People's Party seen as the king maker with eight seats since neither of the two major parties won an outright majority in the 113-seat Legislative Yuan.

The presidential contest on Saturday was a three-way race among candidates from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, or DPP — which China describes as a "serious threat," the main opposition party and pro-Beijing Kuomintang, and the smaller Taiwan People's Party, or TPP.

The Kuomintang, or KMT, won 52 seats in the legislature — one more than the DPP — and the combative Han Kuo-yu could well be the party's choice for Speaker on his return to Taiwan's parliament.

If the KMT forms a coalition with TPP, Han's rancor — after being recalled as Kaoshiung mayor and losing in the 2020 presidential election as KMT's nominee — may be tempered by its prospective coalition partner.

While Lai won the presidential election on Saturday with 40% of the popular vote, his DPP lost 10 seats in Taiwan's parliament from its previous 61, giving up its majority.

At a post-election press conference, Lai pledged to stay open-minded in his governance, while committing to forging consensus in a divided legislature.

"Because the KMT did not win a majority in the legislature, they will be dependent on the support of the TPP to build a majority coalition, and if the KMT is too intransigent and tries to oppose everything the Lai administration wants to do, they may have a hard time sustaining that coalition," said Sara Newland, an assistant professor in government at Smith College and a scholar of local politics in China and Taiwan.

"The TPP's policy positions aren't very

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