Trees Party

Trees Party[1]
樹黨
Shù Dǎng
Chairperson (joint) Pan Han-chiang
Lin Chia-yu
Founded August 10, 2014 (2014-08-10)
Headquarters Taipei, Taiwan
Ideology Environmentalism
Youth activism
Social democracy
Political position Centre-left
Legislative Yuan
0 / 113
Municipal Mayoralties
0 / 6
City Mayoralties and County Magistracies
0 / 16
Local Councillors
1 / 907
Township Chiefs
1 / 211
Website
www.treesparty.tw

The Trees Party (traditional Chinese: 樹黨; simplified Chinese: 树党) is a minor political party in Taiwan. The core ideology of the party is environmentalism, and it is commonly identified as a "third force" party belonging to neither the Pan-Blue or Pan-Green Coalitions.[2] The party was formed in 2014 as a splinter group of the Green Party Taiwan[3] by brothers Pan Han-sheng and Pan Han-chiang.[4]

History

In 2014 Han Pan-sheng, one of the "stars" of the Green Party Taiwan (GPT), left the fold to start a new party, the Trees Party with his brother, Han Pan-chiang, a development described as "damaging" to the GPT.[5] Despite this, the Green Party Taiwan responded to the announcement of the formation of the Trees Party by "welcoming their strong stance on the protection of trees".[6] While several articles in the English-language media refer to the party as the "Tree Party", the formal English name as stated in the constitution is the "Trees Party".[1]

In the wake of Typhoon Soudelor in August 2015 the party commented to the media that rapid urbanisation, with trees hemmed in by cement and asphalt, contributed to the three thousand trees in Taipei City that were uprooted during the storm.[7]

Platform

There are six core policy positions articulated in the party constitution: environmental stewardship, social justice, upholding participatory democracy, pacifism, sustainable development, and respect for diversity. The constitution also commits the party to "defending trees and Mother Earth from human greed and ignorance".[1]

The party sees its mission as:[1]

Electoral performance

in the November 2014 9-in-1 elections the party won one seat in the Yilan County council.[8] In the same election, the party won one mayoral race, for Jiji Township in Nantou County.[9] In the race for the Taipei City Council, the party polled 2.1% of the total votes cast, winning no seats.[10]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.