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By Loa Iok-sin
STAFF REPORTER
Thursday, Jan 10, 2008, Page 3
Crying, swearing, kneeling, finger-pointing, being hospitalized and filing
lawsuits are all too familiar scenarios during election campaigns. But such
campaign strategies may not necessarily work to a candidate's advantage.
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Lin Yi-shih's (林益世) wife, Peng
Ai-chia (彭愛佳), was attacked during a stumping tour on Tuesday and was rushed
to hospital. While hospitalized, Peng accused her husband's Democratic
Progressive Party (DPP) rival, Yu Cheng-hsien (余政憲), of masterminding the
attack.
In reaction, DPP legislative caucus whip Wang Tuoh (王拓) said during a press
conference at the legislature yesterday that Lin's camp may have planned the
attack to win sympathy votes.
"Why would I want to be attacked three days before [the election]? I'd
rather be by my husband's side as he finishes his campaign tour than lying
here. My fatty [Lin] has been on his own from dawn to dusk, I want to keep
him company," Peng said, bursting into tears after hearing Wang's comments.
Meanwhile, Yu yesterday urged Lin not to manipulate an isolated incident of
violence, while adding that his mother had also been hospitalized because
she was so worried about his campaign.
"I think the candidates are making sensational appeals
to attract sympathy votes," Tamkang University public administration
professor Shih Cheng-feng (施正鋒) told the Taipei Times in a telephone
interview.
"It has been an effective strategy to some degree in the past, but I don't
believe it's still appealing to voters," he said. "It's not a normal
phenomenon in a democratic country -- I think voters will gradually realize
that and begin to look more at a candidate's policy agenda. As the tricks
become `useless,' they will eventually die out."
Yang Hsiao-ying (楊曉盈), a voter in Taipei County, agreed with Shih.
"[Campaign tricks] will not affect how I vote," she said. "It's like I'm
watching a soap opera when they show candidates or their spouses crying or
kneeling on TV. Peng Ai-chia and Yeh Yi-jin's [葉宜津] tears were so fake."
Yeh is a DPP Legislator running for re-election in Tainan County. She was in
tears as she denied an allegation by her KMT rival Hung Yu-chin (洪玉欽) last
month that she was involved in an affair.
Yang, however, admitted that she was touched when Lu Hsiu-yi (盧修一) kneeled
down before tens of thousands of people and begged them to support then-DPP
Taipei County commissioner candidate Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌) the night before
the election in 1997, "but that was a completely different scenario," she
said.
Lu, a DPP lawmaker who had been preparing to run for Taipei County
commissioner, withdrew from the race because he discovered he had terminal
lung cancer.
Despite his bad health, Lu insisted on appearing at Su's campaign rally the
night before the election. As he kneeled down to beg the crowd to support
Su, many in the audience and in front of the TV were in tears.
Several later attempts to copy it proved unsuccessful.
"James Soong [宋楚瑜] kneeled down too, but he was unsuccessful -- We [voters]
can feel if they are sincere," Yang said.
Soong did so in 2003 when he was preparing to run in the 2004 presidential
election.
A legislative candidate's campaign official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said that such strategies can still be more or less effective,
"but it's tricky and not without risk."
"The effectiveness of `sympathy strategies' varies from district to
district," he said. "Usually, it's less effective in districts where
constituencies are better educated and sometimes it can actually hurt the
candidate."
"You have to calculate carefully and apply the strategy in the right
district at the right time," he said.
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