The Motorists' Party of ROC

The Motorists' Party of ROC
中華民國機車黨
Zhōnghuámínguó jīchēdǎng
Chairperson Bryan Dong (董建一)
Founded May 2010 (on Facebook)
August 2014 (officially registered)
Headquarters No.257, Sec. 6, YanPing N. Rd., Shilin District, Taipei, Republic of China
Political position Right-wing
Colours      Purple
Legislative Yuan
0 / 113
Municipal Mayoralties
0 / 6
City Mayoralties and County Magistracies
0 / 16
Local Councillors
0 / 906
Township Chiefs
0 / 211
Website
Facebook
Politics of the Republic of China
Political parties
Elections

The Motorists' Party of ROC (M.P.R., traditional Chinese: 中華民國機車黨; simplified Chinese: 中华民国机车党) is a minor political party in Taiwan dedicated to represent motorists and road users. Additionally, its political views, particularly on national identity,[1] are usually considered as pan-Blue.

History

The M.P.R. was formed on Facebook in May 2010 [2][3] and became an officially registered party in August 2014.[4][5]

Ideology

M.P.R. is originally and generally to centred on rights of motorists and road users, including pedestrians. Its platform of traffic consists of promotion of motorists' rights, reforms of applying for driving license, improvement of road quality and so forth. Besides, M.P.R. suggests that historically-held University Entrance Examination should be re-introduced and minimum wage should be discussed and risen, etc.[6]

However, its chairperson Bryan Dong (董建一), who represents M.P.R., recognises 1992 Consensus,[7] pursues Chinese unification and is opposed to Taiwan independence movement. M.P.R. advocates joining AIIB and TPP. On the contrary of many minor parties (e.g. Green Party Taiwan), nuclear power is its most preferable method to produce electricity. M.P.R. also holds social-conservative views on several public issues, such as strong support for severe penalties (especially uses of capital punishment for fatal drunken driving and drug trafficking[8][9]) and opposition to legalisation of same-sex marriage (but support for other types of civil partnership).[10]

Election result

In the 2016 general election, Bryan Dong ran for New Taipei 9th district legislative seat, but failed to defeat incumbent Kuomintang Lin Te-fu (林德福).

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.