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Time Matters in Cross-Strait Relations: Tsai Ing-wen and Taiwan's Future

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2024

Jonathan Sullivan*
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
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Abstract

In this article, I examine the ROC president's discursive response to PRC efforts to limit Taiwan's future possibilities and undermine confidence in Taiwan's future. I argue that the capacity to imagine the future, and perceiving agency to affect future outcomes, is crucial for national resilience. Since Taiwan is routinely exposed to factors known to cause reduced self-efficacy and morale – uncertainty, threat, marginalization, restricted agency, circumscribed action repertoires – it is crucial that Taiwanese people have a meaningful sense of “what are we striving for?” and confidence that they have the agency to realize these aspirations. The article sets out an empirical examination of discursive constructions of the future as a vector for enhancing cohesion and resolve in Taiwanese society. Foregrounding a novel dimension in the study of Taiwan, the article contributes both an interpretivist account of President Tsai Ing-wen's discourse and opens a new avenue for research on the largely neglected issue of futurity in cross-Strait relations.

摘要

摘要

本文将研究中华民国总统对于中华人民共和国对于台湾未来可能性的限制及破坏其对自身未来的信心所做出的话语回应。是否拥有对未来的想象能力及对未来愿景的感知能力对于一个社会韧性至关重要。台湾经常面临众多会导致其国民感知能力及自信心消退的因素,包括不确定性,威胁,边缘化,受限的主观能动性和行动范围等等。在此背景下,台湾民众是否能对于 “我们在为什么而努力” 这一问题有一个切实的认识及是否能拥有实现自身愿景的主观能动性便显得至关重要。本文认为对于“未来”的话语建构是作为增强台湾社会凝聚力和决心的载体,并对此展开实证检验。基于对台湾研究的新颖视角,本文既对蔡英文总统的话语做出了解释性的解读,也针对此前被忽略的海峡两岸的未来前景这一研究话题开辟了新的可能性

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of SOAS University of London

Two decades ago, a high-level Taiwanese defence official declared that “the greatest threat we face is psychological warfare from the People's Republic of China (PRC).”Footnote 1 Successive iterations of the Republic of China (ROC) Quadrennial Defence Review (sinianqi guofang zongjiantao 四年期國防總檢討) show that such concerns have not diminished,Footnote 2 as the PRC has expanded and honed operations under the Three Warfares (san zhan 三战) concept.Footnote 3 The 2021 ROC National Defence Report (guofang baogaoshu 國防報告書) depicts a multitude of actions designed to “cause mental disarray and confusion in order to weaken our fighting will [and] determination to defend ourselves.”Footnote 4 As part of the PRC's sustained information warfare campaign against Taiwan, analysts have noted concerted efforts to convince Taiwanese people that “Taiwan's future is bleak or hopeless” and of “the inevitability of unification.”Footnote 5 Taiwan is subject to deliberate efforts to undermine and constrain its future possibilities – to the extent that the PRC intrudes on the time horizon in which Taiwan might continue to exist as an autonomous entity. Taiwanese autonomy, it is implied, is on borrowed time, pending a definitive shift in the military balance or the countdown to “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation” (Zhonghua minzu weida fuxing 中华民族伟大复兴), from which “complete unification of the motherland” (zuguo wanquan tongyi 祖国完全统一) is indivisible.

A communication strategy that seeks to erode Taiwanese people's perceptions of their agency to determine possible futures is not accidental. The capacity to imagine potential futures and perceiving agency to affect future outcomes are fundamental psychological needs associated with resilience and morale. Hence, I argue that passively “waiting for the inevitable” or allowing external actors to undermine faith in the future could reduce confidence in the viability of Taiwan's continuing autonomy and determination to resist coercive unification. I argue further that national cohesion requires a vision of the future and a meaningful sense of “what are we striving for?” and “what do we want to be?” The central questions motivating this article are thus substantively important. First, does the ROC president Tsai Ing-wen 蔡英文 address Taiwanese people's perceptions of the future? Second, does she present a vision for Taiwan's future?

At the national societal level, envisioning the future relies on processes of social construction, hence the focus in this article on discourse.Footnote 6 Foregrounding discourse does not negate the importance of policy, but this article explicitly seeks to contribute an interpretivist account of Tsai's articulation of ideas, values and identity. The purpose of the article is neither normative nor advocacy. It is an examination of how the communication strategy of Taiwan's most prominent political actor – the ROC president and chairwoman of Taiwan's party-in-power for much of the same period – articulates the issue of Taiwan's future.Footnote 7 To some extent all political leaders speak to the future of the nation, since time is intrinsic to political meaningFootnote 8 and central to the articulation and practice of politics.Footnote 9 Hence, political speech couched in the “future tense” is commonplace. Yet, in the Taiwanese context, where possible futures are contested and subject to circumscriptions imposed by the PRC, and where Taiwan's future national status is a dividing line in domestic politics, it takes on particular significance. Some Taiwanese scholars have identified a “collective insecurity mentality”Footnote 10 and “lost confidence in Taiwan's future,”Footnote 11 although other indicators show that Taiwanese people are not easily cowed or influenced.Footnote 12 Despite the significance of time and perceptions of the future in Taiwanese politics, explicit conceptual and empirical treatments are limited.Footnote 13 I thus seek to show in this article that futurity is an important component and framework for analysing presidential speech in Taiwan.

Future Perspectives and the Nation

Taiwan scholars have produced a wealth of work on the connections between historical time and Taiwanese subjectivity and identity,Footnote 14 and have explored Taiwan's spatial liminality and ambiguities.Footnote 15 Survey work has begun to explore attitudes towards the future in terms of support for democracy and national identity.Footnote 16 However, analyses of political speech at the elite level, while often sensitive to cross-time variation, do not explicitly consider time/futurity as a framework, motivation or variable.Footnote 17 This is an important gap, since I will argue that perceptions of the future are associated with resilience, efficacy and confidence. This is germane to Taiwan, which faces concerted external efforts to undermine faith in the future and in its range of future options. As national leader, the ROC president has the capacity and responsibility to address this issue in communications, and analysts should thus take note of how such an issue is articulated.

The capacity for individuals to picture “possible selves” in future time is related to the speed and quality of aging.Footnote 18 Indeterminacy, i.e. waiting for an uncertain future outcome, decreases morale and self-efficacy.Footnote 19 People who experience “future anxiety,”Footnote 20 “fatalistic time perspectives”Footnote 21 or “dark futures”Footnote 22 exhibit reduced levels of self-confidence and resilience. Fearful or pessimistic attitudes towards the future can inhibit collective action,Footnote 23 and reduce capacity to address pressing issues in various economicFootnote 24 and social settings.Footnote 25 These findings are noteworthy because Taiwanese people are routinely exposed to stimuli – uncertainty, threat, marginalization, restricted agency, circumscribed action repertoires – associated with such outcomes. The architects of the PRC operations described in the next section and the institutions in Taiwan responsible for national security cited at the start of this article evidently believe in the potential for such causal effects.

There is increasing acceptance within constructivist approaches that nations can collectively manifest what are normally thought of as individual psychological and emotional conditionsFootnote 26 and responses to stimuli like trauma.Footnote 27 Further literature connects societal perceptions of the future to national resilience. One classic study concluded that “the individual or nation which has no sense of direction in time, no sense of a clear future ahead, is likely to be vacillating, uncertain in behaviour and to have a poor chance of surviving.”Footnote 28 A contemporary analysis identifies a connection between national leaders’ optimistic or pessimistic outlook on the future and foreign policy behaviours.Footnote 29 Approaching the issue from the opposite direction, studies have found a mutually reinforcing relationship between optimism and cultural vitalityFootnote 30 and between positive images of the future and the well-being of society.Footnote 31 A common thread in these studies is that nations require confidence in the future.

A separate literature suggests nations also require an idea of what the future might look like. This need is acutest in new, marginalized or otherwise precarious nations where the process of “imagining a future allows the nation to become present.”Footnote 32 The construction of a “future imagined community”Footnote 33 is founded on “building collective imaginations about the commonality of the nation.”Footnote 34 Such processes involve the contestation and construction of “visions of the normative, valuable, and desirable future for a political community.”Footnote 35 During authoritarian one-party rule, the Kuomintang's (KMT) hegemonic and exclusionary national imaginary was rooted in history, place and nostalgia (an alternative form of imagining). Democratization facilitated a new phase of contestation over political and cultural imaginariesFootnote 36 and new possibilities for the (re-)discovery and (re-)animation of distinct historical, cultural, linguistic and ethnic experiences. These processes contributed to the emergence of a broader conceptualization of “Taiwaneseness” and created potential for alternative Taiwanese futures.Footnote 37

Historical experience, notably the February 28 incident, provided a starting point for Taiwanese subjectivity, but it did not remain fixed in the past.Footnote 38 As Arif Dirlik argued, the goal of Taiwanese “indigenism” was “not to restore the bygone past, but to draw upon the past to create a new future.”Footnote 39 It thus resembled “a utopian project that opens to an alternative future,”Footnote 40 as Taiwan's rejection of nativist traditionalism and restorative nationalism in favour of a liberal and civic form of multicultural nationalism has subsequently demonstrated.Footnote 41 Visions of Taiwanese futures are not unanimous, since national identity and future national status remain major political and social dividing lines. Former president Ma Ying-jeou 馬英九, for instance, envisaged preservation of a more traditional rendition of the ROC and productive relations with the PRC under the auspices of a “one China” framework. In its current democratic form, Taiwan is better placed to accommodate such contestation over alternative national futures. However, these deliberative processes are vulnerable to concerted external efforts to exacerbate latent and emerging divisions and to undermine confidence that Taiwan possesses any future possibilities outside unification.

PRC Actions and the Circumscription of Taiwanese Futures

Past and future alike are ideologically charged battlegrounds and reservoirs of political symbolism in China, but most germane to this article is the juxtaposition of Chinese modernization framed as inexorable open-ended progress and a “Taiwan question” (Taiwan wenti 台湾问题) bounded by a discrete endpoint: “reunification.” Taiwan features prominently in PRC futures. Reunification is a “sacred duty” (shensheng zhize 神圣职责) and a marker of the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) claim to legitimacy as the true representative and defender of the Chinese nation. Unlike the Belt and Road Initiative, which is unfolding and unbounded with fuzzy time horizons and an undefined endpoint,Footnote 42 unification has a definitive quality that cannot be finessed – Taiwan is either under PRC control or it is not. Progress towards “peaceful unification” (heping tongyi 和平统一) has been frustrated by political and popular opposition in Taiwan, yet PRC leaders persist in framing it as an unavoidable fact awaiting realization, while simultaneously accelerating capacity-building for future military contingencies.Footnote 43

Deng Xiaoping's 邓小平 willingness to defer resolution of the Taiwan question to an indeterminate future juncture has fallen out of favour. Confidence that “time is on China's side” has yielded to impatience and anxiety about Taiwan's prolonged separation, despite the PRC's success in deterring formal independence. In 2019, on the 40th anniversary of the “Message to Taiwan Compatriots” (gao Taiwan tongbao shu 告台湾同胞书), Xi Jinping 习近平 declared that political separation “cannot be passed down from generation to generation” (buneng yidai yidai chuanxiaqu 不能一代一代传下去).Footnote 44 The scope and intensity of actions against Taiwan have increased accordingly. While the large-scale People's Liberation Army (PLA) drills in August 2022, routinization of PLA Air Force incursions into Taiwan's Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ) and across the Median Line of the Strait understandably command news headlines, it is in the domain of hybrid warfare (information, cognitive, psychological and cyber warfare, supplemented by diverse grey-zone activities) that PRC operations have been even more active.

Some analysts characterize the PRC's approach as the pursuit of “winning without fighting”Footnote 45 through “political warfare.”Footnote 46 Sustained information warfare efforts attack the legitimacy of the Taiwanese government and seek to exacerbate social divisions and destabilize Taiwan's democracy.Footnote 47 Social penetration, co-optation and United Front operations threaten to corrupt Taiwanese elections,Footnote 48 mediaFootnote 49 and law and order.Footnote 50 Military exercises and incursions, intimidatory rhetoric and strangulation of Taiwan's international space aim to disempower and marginalize.Footnote 51 Infiltration of the military is used to frame ROC forces as compromised and unable to defend Taiwan's interests.Footnote 52 Successful efforts to “poach” diplomatic allies remind Taiwanese of the ROC's minimal remaining formal ties.Footnote 53 Systematically orchestrated domestic propaganda cultivates unified public opinion regarding Taiwan in a show of strength and resolve.Footnote 54 In sum, it resembles a full spectrum “anaconda strategy” designed to constrict Taiwan until it can no longer resist unification.Footnote 55 Deliberate efforts to inculcate feelings of hopelessness and resignation stand alongside PRC leaders’ promises of familial reconciliation (liang'an yijiaqin 两岸一家亲) and immediate access to respect, prosperity and security under the auspices of “one country, two systems” (yiguo liangzhi 一国两制).

As the differential in cross-Strait economic and military power has grown, Xiyang Zuo argues, “Taiwan's leaders are increasingly lacking confidence in the future.”Footnote 56 My analysis of Tsai's speeches does not lead me to a similar conclusion. However, the divergent trajectory Zuo notes is reflected in urgent policy debates around arms procurement, reforms to military service and a panoply of countermeasures to strengthen national security and safeguard the democratic system.Footnote 57 The following empirical analysis will seek to identify if such developments, and a response to them, are manifest in the ROC president's speeches.

Methods and Data

To explore how Tsai articulates her thoughts on Taiwan's future, I employ a discourse analytical approach to a corpus of speech data. Mindful of context and the motives behind the production of a text and interpreting linguistic choices for what they reveal, discourse analysis differs from content analytical approaches that make inferences based on observed variance in frequencies of word choice. Since the ROC president produces a vast corpus of public text, in all manner of spoken, written, visual and multimedia formats, selection criteria were imperative, leaving scope for further research.Footnote 58 First, only texts that were directly attributable to the president rather than the government or Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) were chosen. Second, only verbal “texts” were included. Visual and digital communication methods (for example, images, video and memes) are an increasingly important component of political communications and public diplomacy, but they require a discrete set of analytical tools that are outside the scope of a single research article. Third, the timeframe was limited to the current ROC president's tenure, from 20 May 2016 to the conclusion of data collection in April 2022. Comparative analysis of former presidents or other Taiwanese political actors is thus another avenue for further research. Finally, the selection of texts was limited to “major addresses.” Over the course of any administration, the ROC president delivers thousands of speeches, the majority of which represent quotidian (for example, encounters with school children or firefighters) or specialized (for example, talks to business leaders) communication acts.Footnote 59 The core sample for this article was restricted to recurring set-piece addresses generally recognized as meaningful vehicles for expressing the ROC president's “ideational vision,” namely New Year's Day and National Day addresses, plus two inaugural addresses (a total of 14 speeches).Footnote 60 I supplemented these core speeches with items designated “important speeches” (zhongyao tanhua 重要谈话) by the Office of the President. This selection of 118 items at time of writing includes responses to the cessation of diplomatic relations, communications with foreign allies, announcements of major pieces of legislation, end-of-year press conferences, anniversaries in office. etc.Footnote 61

The analysis was conducted using Chinese language transcripts of Tsai's spoken addresses. English translations in the reporting are mine, with the original language in parentheses. Verbal communication involves more than just words (for example, intonation, pauses, physical gestures, etc.), but given my research questions and the purpose of the analysis, I deem this loss of data acceptable. Tsai's speeches are available via https://www.president.gov.tw/ and direct links to cited texts are footnoted. For analysts, political speech has important advantages over less structured forms of natural language since the first rule of democratic political communications is accessibility and consistency (“staying on message”). Political speech thus tends to be relatively simple, disciplined and repetitive. Repetition of keywords functions as a signal of what the speaker deems important and often constitutes “the linguistic hooks on which the discourse hangs.”Footnote 62 Following established discourse analytical processes involving multiple readings and intra-/inter-textual cross-referencing, the corpus was categorized and coded to identify key themes, symbols and indicators. The coding process was guided by two questions derived from the literature discussed above. First, in light of the centrality of future perceptions to psychological resilience, how does Tsai prime Taiwanese people to face the future? Second, given the importance of narratives to national coherence, what is Tsai's vision for a future Taiwan?

Galvanizing Taiwanese to Face the Future

Tsai's speeches are mindful of threats to Taiwanese people's confidence in the future, with numerous themes designed to galvanize and promote resilience. The association between themes such as reassurance, validation and self-reliance that I identified in Tsai's speeches, and the inculcation of self-efficacy, self-esteem and optimism at the individual level, are well established in the psychology literature.Footnote 63

Reassurance and encouragement

Tsai does not avoid the perils Taiwan faces nor sugar-coat the “extremely bleak” (jiwei yanjun 極為嚴峻) nature of cross-Strait relations and Taiwan's diplomatic situation.Footnote 64 However, bleakly realistic representations of darkness and obstacles are invariably juxtaposed with motivational metaphors of passage and light. Taiwan is often portrayed as moving forward and overcoming challenges, and the future is associated with brightness. In one National Day address, she expressed this through the Taiwanese lyrics of singer-songwriter Hsieh Ming-yu's 謝銘祐 song, Lu 路, invoking the joyful traverse of formidable rivers and mountains in the absence of a pathway.Footnote 65 Tsai is clear that negotiating Taiwan's challenges requires effective policy foundations, particularly in the economic and security domains. This is evident in the abundant policy detail in her speeches. She also notes the need for qualities like staying power, self-reliance and vigilance, since “[we] don't have the luxury of dropping our guard” (meiyou songxie de benqian 沒有鬆懈的本錢).Footnote 66 Tsai is extremely mindful and attentive to psychological resilience. Entreaties to positivity, proactiveness and optimism are accompanied by repeated exhortations to “overcome challenges with determination” (jianding kefu tiaozhan 堅定克服挑戰),Footnote 67 and positive reinforcements like “the nation's direction is correct” (guojia de fangxiang zhengque 國家的方向正確).Footnote 68 These statements might appear like trivial platitudes set against the relentless seriousness of PRC information campaigns, but they are a response to what Tsai identifies as a pernicious crisis of confidence afflicting Taiwanese people, which prevents them from internalizing Taiwan's achievements and embracing future challenges. In this context, what would otherwise be a flimsy or self-regarding rhetorical question like “is there anything we Taiwanese can't accomplish?” (you shenme shiqing women Taiwanren zuobudao de ne 有什麼事情是我們臺灣人做不到的呢?), becomes a meaningful invitation to reflect on Taiwan's capacities.Footnote 69 The then-gold standard early-stage pandemic response was framed as proving Taiwan's “ability to survive in adversity” (zai nijingzhong de shengcun nengli 在逆境中的生存能力).Footnote 70 This was partly owing to the government's demonstrated capacity to keep people safe during a public health crisis, which PRC propaganda and online information campaigns actively misrepresented, but also because it generated substantial external attention and validation. This is a significant issue given Taiwan's insecurities and the longstanding salience of, and contestation over the appropriate means to achieving, “national dignity” (guojia zunyan 國家尊嚴).

Self-confidence and validation

Tsai explicitly accepts that Taiwan's precarity and isolation have resulted in Taiwanese people lacking confidence in themselves (Taiwanren dui ziji quefa xinxin 臺灣人對自己缺乏信心).Footnote 71 Fear of diminishment (beiaihua 被矮化) and marginalization (bianyuanhua 邊緣化) have been a feature of Taiwanese political discourse for decades, and they are implicit drivers of Tsai's many references to external sources of validation. Whether multinationals investing in Taiwan, foreign media relocating their operations to Taipei, or the number of foreign visitors, such engagement is framed as demonstrating “the affection and regard the world has for Taiwan” (shijie dui women de xi'ai he zhongshi 世界對我們的喜愛和重視).Footnote 72 The pandemic allowed the international community to see Taiwan's capabilities as an “Island of Resilience” (jianren zhi dao 堅韌之島),Footnote 73 a well-chosen slogan for National Day in 2020 that resonates beyond its immediate context. Like Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturers, Olympic champions and other exemplars Tsai cites, Taiwan's pandemic response fostered the belief that Taiwan could “stand proud on the international stage” (neng zai shijieshang yangmei tuqi 能在世界上揚眉吐氣).Footnote 74 Since Taiwan's opportunities to achieve international recognition are circumscribed and incommensurate with Taiwan's status as a major global economy and successful democracy, successes in science, sports and technology are invariably foregrounded by Tsai as sources of national pride and self-confidence. In another context this could be interpreted as boosterish back-slapping, but the evolution of the government's public diplomacy pandemic hashtag from the proactive #TaiwanCanHelp to the plaintive #LetTaiwanHelp, illustrates why it suggests pathos not bombast.

Strength in diversity

Togetherness is necessarily a key theme given Taiwan's historical and emerging cleavages and outside efforts to exacerbate social divisions. Tsai encourages a sense of unity by invoking shared history and shared values, such that Taiwanese people constitute an “indivisible community of shared destiny” (shengsi yugong de mingyun gongtongti 生死與共的命運共同體).Footnote 75 Statements like this risk finessing divisions rooted in national identity, but Tsai does not shy away from “historical baggage” (lishi baofu 歷史包袱) in the context of Taiwanese domestic issues or cross-Strait relations. Indeed, she acknowledges the need to confront uncomfortable realities as a foundation for progress. Speaking to the mistreatment of Taiwan's indigenous peoples, she says a reckoning with the past is necessary so that history can be transformed from a cause of division to a source of “momentum to move forward together” (wangqian zou de dongle 一起往前走的動力).Footnote 76 It is also key to moving beyond the older mainlander/native Taiwanese cleavage (waisheng 外省/bensheng 本省) and continuing divisions over future national preference. Tsai acknowledges that settlers arriving at different times all contributed to Taiwan's development and portrays an inclusive nation where membership of the shared community is not dependent on origin.Footnote 77 This is redolent of former presidents Lee Teng-hui 李登輝 and Ma Ying-jeou's “New Taiwanese” (xin Taiwanren 新臺灣人) formulation from the late 1990s, although Tsai's version is more capacious, including new migrants from South-East Asia and indigenous peoples. Tsai argues that it is continuous work towards “reconciliation” (hejie 和解), “shared existence” (gongcun 共存) and “shared prosperity” (gongrong 共榮) that creates the conditions for “a new future for Taiwan” (Taiwan xin de weilai 臺灣新的未來).Footnote 78

Unity and self-reliance

Accepting that the composition of Taiwanese society is evolving, with diverse peoples and migration waves, is a key foundation of Tsai's vision for Taiwanese society. It also helps to frame unity and togetherness as central to Taiwanese self-determination. Responding to an earthquake in Hualien 花蓮縣, Tsai delivered a message on unity and resilience that occurs elsewhere metaphorically: “It is because we are united and together that no disaster can knock us down” (yinwei tuanjie yizhi cai buhui zai zaihaizhong daoxia 因為團結一致才不會在災害中倒下).Footnote 79 Unity is depicted as a product of shared life experiences and shared feelings and it is on the basis of this collective experience that all Taiwanese “must shoulder a shared future” (yiqi chengdan gongtong de weilai 一起承擔共同的未來).Footnote 80 Unity is also engendered through collective ownership, since ultimately “Taiwan's story belongs to everyone” (Taiwan de gushi shuyu meiyige ren 臺灣的故事屬於每一個人).Footnote 81 No matter how unity is framed, Tsai is adamant that remaining “united under the banner of freedom and democracy” is imperative for Taiwan's future (tuanjie zai ziyou minzhu de qizhi xia 團結在自由民主的旗幟下).Footnote 82 In this framing, it was togetherness and commitment to democratic values that allowed Taiwanese to protect themselves from the ravages of the Covid pandemic.Footnote 83 Invoking Taiwanese self-reliance, as Tsai often does, is meaningful since Taiwan has been subject to the actions of external actors and/or the interplay of external interests for much of its history. Even after the achievement of economic prosperity and democratization, Taiwan's choice structure remained constrained by outside actors. It is likewise significant that Tsai frequently invokes Taiwanese agency and the power to determine Taiwan's own futures. Statements like, “we decide our future” (women de weilai women ziji jueding 我們的未來我們自己決定)Footnote 84 and the imperative to “seize the future” (zhangwo weilai 掌握未來) lest “our fate be decided by others” (bei bieren jueding le mingyun 被別人決定了命運),Footnote 85 reinforce the belief that Taiwan is not passively subject to the preferences and actions of others. Tsai emphasizes that Taiwan's future is founded on collective responsibility and requires every citizen to “carry the future of this nation” (kangqi zhege guojia de weilai 扛起這個國家的未來).Footnote 86 A preferred narrative device is citing past adversity and connecting future challenges to historical struggles that have been overcome. Hardships endured during economic modernization and democratization are used as inspiration to encourage contemporary resilience and resolve.Footnote 87 In one speech, Tsai followed the enumeration of more than a dozen military, economic, developmental and health challenges by listing Taiwanese achievements and linking their realization to the resilience of the Taiwanese people.Footnote 88 Reformulated as Tsai's favoured metaphor of passage and light, there are many examples of arduous uphill climbs rewarded with beautiful views.Footnote 89

Tsai's Vision for Taiwan's Future

Since the election campaign of 2016, “maintain the status quo” (weichi xianzhuang 維持現狀) became the mainstay of Tsai's discourse on cross-Strait relations. However, it would be wrong to interpret this as favouring stasis. Early in her first term, Tsai hinted that, for her, maintaining the status quo contained a “more proactive meaning” (geng jiji de yiyi 更積極的意義).Footnote 90 In her second inaugural speech, Tsai declared her intention to “reinvent Taiwan” (rang Taiwan tuotai huangu 讓台灣脫胎換骨) and “lead Taiwan into the future” (dailing Taiwan yingxiang weilai 帶領台灣迎向未來).Footnote 91 This dynamic intent is reflected in a number of discursive and conceptual movements that form the basis of Tsai's vision for a future Taiwan: a sovereign nation committed to democratic values that is an active regional and global stakeholder.

A sovereign nation

Tsai consistently and explicitly rejects a Taiwanese future authored by the PRC. The PRC's offer of “one country two systems” would negate both Taiwan's democracy and sovereignty and is thus unthinkable.Footnote 92 This is Tsai's longstanding stance, but it has become more emphatic in speeches since the deterioration of conditions in Hong Kong beginning in 2019, which Tsai references in support of her rejection of unification and to highlight the preciousness and precarity of Taiwan's democracy.Footnote 93 Tsai's retort to domestic opponents who interpret her posture, including her refusal to accept the “1992 Consensus” (jiu er gongshi 九二共识), as an unnecessary provocation, is that “safeguarding national sovereignty is not provocative” (shouwei guojia zhuquanbushi tiaoxin 守衛國家主權不是挑釁) but a fundamental duty.Footnote 94 Owing to Taiwan's vulnerabilities and need for international support, the “provocateur” label is a serious liability for an ROC president, as former president Chen Shui-bian 陳水扁 discovered to his cost. After her China policy was criticized during her failed bid for the presidency in 2012 (including by the Obama administration), Tsai sought the protective veil of the “status quo.” However, the meaning of “status quo” is dynamic and malleable. Tsai's interpretation is that Taiwan is an independent nation under the ROC name, which renders the pursuit of another hypothetical and dangerous form of “Taiwan independence” (Taidu 臺獨) superfluous. Assuming this logic, Tsai positions herself as a defender of the “status quo” juxtaposed with a “revisionist” PRC. The apparent acquiescence, or support, among some Western leaders for Tsai's “existing independence” interpretation is consistent with their own evolving strategic preferences, and has likely contributed to the PRC anxieties and intensifying actions against Taiwan. The result is that Tsai could channel Lee's “special state to state relations” (teshu guoyuguo guanxi 特殊國與國關係) and Chen's “one country on each side” (yibian yiguo 一邊一國) statements and insist that “neither side of the Strait belongs to the other” (haixia liang'an hubu lishu 海峽兩岸互不隸屬) without generating the international concern attached to her predecessors.Footnote 95 Domestically, Tsai's position has been criticized by those Taiwanese for whom decolonization is incomplete until Taiwan achieves formal independence from both the PRC and the ROC, which they see as an alien regime inseparable from the KMT's four-decade authoritarian rule. However, after re-election, Tsai addressed this issue by distinguishing between the pre-1947 ROC on the Chinese mainland and the post-1947 ROC on Taiwan.Footnote 96 Since 2020, she has promoted the formulation “ROC Taiwan” (Zhonghua Minguo Taiwan 中華民國台灣), conjoining two “affective structures” that embody nativist and pan-Chinese visions for Taiwan.Footnote 97 It represents a significant conceptual contribution to Taiwanese national identity formation within the “status quo” framework, since it implies that democratization liberated the ROC from the KMT colonial regime by making self-rule by the Taiwanese people possible.

Democratic deepening

Democracy is a key foundation in Tsai's articulation of Taiwan's future, facilitated by strength in the economic and security domains. Democratic values are used to instil unity and pride in Taiwanese people, while democratic institutions provide mechanisms for improving governance, ensuring fairness and building consensus. Notably, these issues are all favoured targets of PRC propaganda and misinformation activities. The freedoms guaranteed by democracy and their juxtaposition with conditions in the PRC and latterly Hong Kong is a central frame Tsai uses to consolidate resistance to unification among Taiwanese people. Taiwan's commitment to democratic values is also invoked as a powerful resource for generating international support. Under the auspices of “deepening democracy” (minzhu shenhua 民主深化), Tsai envisions a future Taiwanese society that is fair and just, caring and equitable, able to accommodate diversity and deliver ethnic, gender, generational and ecological justice. In short, “a just nation” (zhengyi de guojia 正義的國家) that embraces genuine diversity and equality.Footnote 98 This aspiration, she acknowledges, requires “thoroughgoing reform” (gaige daodi 改革到底) to create fair institutions, efficient governance and respect for human rights, which is an integral foundation of the nation (renquan liguo 人權立國).Footnote 99 Alongside her progressive aspirations for Taiwanese democracy, Tsai has articulated an increasingly robust position on national security and defence, declaring that “showing weakness and making concessions will not bring peace” (shiruo tuirang bu hui dailai heping 示弱退讓不會帶來和平). This stiffening posture has been accompanied by increasingly reverential framing of the military, for example describing the army as “our family and the staunchest defenders of national sovereignty, freedom and democracy” (guojun shi women de jiaren yeshi guojia zhuquan ziyou minzhuzuiqiang de houdun 國軍是我們的家人,也是國家主權、自由民主最強的後盾). Tsai's reverence for the military can appear incongruous; however, she argues that tangible threats to Taiwan's future necessitate harder deterrence. The aspiration to defend and enhance democracy is framed as protecting an inheritance of Taiwanese youth, given that it is only through democracy that “the next generation has the right to decide their future” (xia yidai baoyou jueding weilai de quanli 下一代保有決定未來的權利).Footnote 100 Reverence for youth recurs in statements such as “if a nation's young people have no future, this nation is bound to have no future” (yige guojia de nianqingren meiyou weilai zhege guojia biding meiyou weilai 一個國家的年輕人沒有未來,這個國家必定沒有未來).Footnote 101 Youth is consistently invoked as the driving force of progress towards an aspirational future and as a rhetorical device to implicitly justify her policies, for example “what sort of nation do we want to leave for our young people” (women daodi yao liuxia yige shenmeyang de guojia gei nianqingren 我們到底要留下一個什麼樣的國家給年輕人).Footnote 102

Global and regional stakeholder

Tsai frames Taiwan as a committed member of the global community of democracies, celebrating Taiwan's courage to “emerge from the shadow of authoritarian China” (zouchu weiquan Zhongguo de yinying 威權中國的陰影).Footnote 103 In a bifurcating world of strategic rivalries, Tsai depicts Taiwan at the vanguard of resistance to authoritarianism, standing on “democracy's first line of defence” (minzhu fangxian de zuiqianyuan 民主防線的最前緣).Footnote 104 The rationale for this positioning is clear, but it is apparent in Tsai's acknowledgement of potential conflict that it is not cost-free. Conflict scenarios have increased in salience since Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the PLA response to Speaker Pelosi's visit, in popular venues and among government officials.Footnote 105 Tsai also frames the trend in Western cooperation to combat the PRC's challenge to international rules and norms as a demonstration of international solidarity with Taiwan, burnishing Taiwanese self-confidence and resolve. Tsai acknowledges that sustained support requires Taiwan's active contribution to regional peace, prosperity and development, but evinces confidence that as a “model student” (mofansheng 模範生) and “firm guardian of peace” (heping de jianding weihuzhe 和平的堅定維護者), Taiwan has the credentials to accede to the “alliance of shared values” (jiazhi tongmeng 價值同盟).Footnote 106 One of the implications of these developments is that peace and security in the Taiwan Strait have been elevated to issues of regional and global concern. The internationalization of the “Taiwan question” is in Taiwan's strategic interest and Tsai is not coy about that. The injunction that Taiwan must be outward looking and connect with the international community is partly strategic, since sustaining Taiwanese resistance to coercion requires it, but it is also central to Tsai's vision for a globally connected future in which Taiwan is permitted and recognized for contributing goods as a responsible regional and global stakeholder. At base, it is an aspiration “to find Taiwan's place in the new international order” (wei Taiwan xunzhao zai guoji xin zhixuzhong de weizhi 為臺灣尋找在國際新秩序中的位置),Footnote 107 something that Taiwan has long sought but been unable to realize.Footnote 108 Taiwan cannot change its physical proximity to the PRC, but in the ideational sphere, Tsai has sought to reposition Taiwan as a regional and global actor. Taiwan's future, according to Tsai, goes beyond the Taiwan Strait. Instead of an actor defined by cross-Strait relations, Tsai depicts a future Taiwan as an Indo-Pacific democracy participating in regional development and security, and a global actor involved in the contest over liberal rules, norms and values. Tsai cites her New Southbound Policy (xin xiangnan zhengce 新向南政策) to illustrate how Taiwan is not just a cross-Strait economy but rather one that is literally and metaphorically invested in the region. This fits Tsai's ambition for a Taiwan willing and able to “actively participate in establishing future regional and international orders” (jiji canyu weilai de guoji he quyu xin zhixu de jianli 積極參與未來的國際和區域新秩序的建立).Footnote 109

Conclusion

Taiwan's refusal to relinquish de facto independence has resulted in sustained PRC military threats, strictures on international participation, economic sanctions and hybrid warfare campaigns. These efforts are designed to weaken Taiwan's resolve, circumscribe future options and reduce the sense that Taiwan possesses agency to author its own futures beyond unification. The motivation for this article was to ascertain whether and how ROC President Tsai Ing-wen has responded to this threat in her own communications. Drawing on psychological literature on perceptions of the future and constructivist literature on nation building, I identified two responses: galvanizing Taiwanese people to face the future and setting out a vision for a future Taiwan. Both responses are significantly present in Tsai Ing-wen's presidential speech, and futurity is an important component of her political discourse. Tsai's vision of an outward-looking and responsible nation, unified by a commitment to liberal democratic values and confident in its capacity for progress is the antithesis of a stagnant and demoralized Taiwan helpless to withstand PRC threats. Her exhortations to unity, resolve and confidence in the future are, in theory, an antidote to PRC efforts to the contrary. The fundamental limitation of this study, however, is that speech data do not speak directly to community effects. In other words, I cannot say whether Tsai's discursive treatment of the future has exerted a positive, negative or no influence on the attitudes or psychological state of Taiwanese people. And since communication models show that meaning-making from political messaging is subject to complex and contingent cognitive-emotional processes, the individual level reception and effects of Tsai's discourse is not something to speculate on without appropriate evidence.Footnote 110 Nevertheless, it is possible to identify the political reception and implications of Tsai's future vision, and to discuss what the framework presented in this article contributes to understandings of Taiwanese and cross-Strait politics.

Tsai's position that Taiwan's future should be decided by the Taiwanese people and that Taiwan's democratic system is fundamental to a future Taiwan is the national consensus.Footnote 111 However, her efforts to advance her vision for a more equitable democratic society, for example through indigenous policy and same-sex marriage legislation, have been divisive.Footnote 112 Some criticism can be explained by partisanship, traditional values and proximate variables like Tsai's deficiencies as a communicator. However, Taiwanese people's commitment to democracy appears unequivocal and is a significant factor in national identity formation.Footnote 113 Tsai's vision for a “sovereign independent” (zhuquan duli 主權獨立) ROC Taiwan is fundamentally irreconcilable with the PRC's “one China principle” (yige Zhongguo yuanze 一个中国原则). The PRC leaders’ evolving understanding of “independence,” which they credibly threaten to use military force to prevent, appears increasingly to incorporate Tsai's efforts to consolidate and prolong Taiwan's separation, enhancing the likelihood of conflict. Her rejection of “one China” in any guise is opposed by those Taiwanese people who are genuinely committed to the concept and by those who see the conceit as a tolerable concession for peaceful and productive cross-Strait relations. The counterpoint, that Ma's acceptance of “one China” did not forestall PLA military preparations or the PRC's demands for unification, reflects the major political division in Taiwan: not independence or unification per se, but how to coexist with Taiwan's biggest trade partner and sole existential threat. Supporters of Tsai's resolute vision accept that risk and uncertainty are necessary costs for preserving Taiwan's autonomy and democracy. Opponents point to the economic and security risks associated with a hard oppositional stance, painting Tsai's posture as an antagonistic and futile gamble to “protect Taiwan by opposing China” (kangzhong baotai 抗中保台). Others invoke the risk of becoming over-dependent on a self-interested US and embroiled in unpredictable US–China rivalry.Footnote 114 Tsai has rightly pointed out on numerous occasions that peace in the Strait is not solely Taiwan's responsibility, while alternative approaches, such as vice-president and DPP presidential candidate Lai Ching-te's 賴清德 “peacefully protect Taiwan” (heping baotai 和平保台), remain under-specified.

Significantly, given Taiwan's marginalization and vulnerabilities, Tsai's commitment to democracy, liberal values, the rules-based international order and her determination to resist the PRC resonates in many Western capitals. In Western democracies, where systemic rivalry with the PRC has prompted a re-evaluation of former engagement policies and newly pronounced debates around threat perceptions and values-based international competition, assessments of Tsai are more unanimous than in Taiwan itself. US support for democratic Taiwan has never been stronger, which Tsai argues validates her vision for Taiwan and should give Taiwanese people the confidence to resist PRC coercion and threats. However, it fails to change the reality of an intractable, motivated and powerful PRC, which will seek to continue to exploit divisions in Taiwanese society, to depress morale and diminish the determination of Taiwanese people to resist unification. Contestation is an inevitable part of Taiwanese politics while national identity, future national status and the appropriate approach to handling cross-Strait relations are the major issues being contested. As a liberal democracy, Taiwan can accommodate competition between alternative visions for the future. In the 2020 presidential election, voters assessed the respective merits of Tsai and her opponent Han Kuo-yu's 韓國瑜 vision of economic and cultural rejuvenation predicated on close relations with the PRC. Irrespective of their political affiliation, the ROC president's vision for a future Taiwan is of substantive importance. And while Taiwan's future status remains uncertain and Taiwanese perceptions of the future remain vulnerable to the PRC's hybrid warfare interventions, the psychological dimensions of the contest over Taiwanese futures will continue to necessitate scholarly attention. Temporality encompasses key concepts and variables in cross-Strait politics, including various timeframes, time horizons, countdowns, deadlines, anniversaries, election cycles and the CCP leadership's predilection for “chrono-ideological narratives.”Footnote 115 Frameworks for analysing cross-Strait political discourse will thus benefit from incorporating such aspects accordingly.

Acknowledgements

I am indebted to the anonymous referees who read the paper closely and provided very constructive critique. I thank Gunter Schubert, Mark Harrison, Lev Nachman, Jinpeng Ma and Weixiang Wang for their feedback.

Competing interests

None.

Jonathan SULLIVAN is associate professor of politics and IR at the University of Nottingham. He is the author with Lev Nachman of Taiwan: A Contested Democracy under Threat (Agenda, 2024).

Footnotes

2 Available at https://www.mnd.gov.tw/PublishForQDR.aspx. Accessed 5 July 2022.

3 Appearing first in the Political Work Guidelines of the People's Liberation Army in 2003, the Three Warfares refer to the domains of public opinion, psychology and law.

4 Ministry of National Defence 2021, 46.

5 Harold, Beauchamp-Mustafaga and Hornung Reference Harold, Beauchamp-Mustafaga and Hornung2021.

6 Phillips and Hardy Reference Phillips and Hardy2002.

7 Scholars making similar arguments about the prominence of the ROC presidents and the utility of studying their speeches include Lams and Liao Reference Lams and Liao2011; McConaghy Reference McConaghy2021; Sullivan and Lowe Reference Sullivan and Lowe2010.

8 Heidegger Reference Heidegger2010[1927]; Reynolds Reference Reynolds2012.

9 For an overview, see Pierson Reference Pierson2011.

10 Wu, Jieh-min Reference Wu, Shih and Liao2015, 288.

11 Li and Song Reference Li and Song2020, 287.

13 Exceptions include Ono's (Reference Ono2003) analysis of Taiwanese student's attitudes towards the future and Tsai and Lee's (Reference Tsai and Lee2021) analysis of the Taiwan genome project.

16 Hsiao, Yi-ching, and Yu Reference Hsiao and Yu2020; Wu, Chung-li and Lin Reference Wu and Lin2019.

17 Chang, Hui-Ching, and Holt Reference Chang and Holt2009; Cheng Reference Cheng2006; Wei and Duann Reference Wei and Duann2019.

18 Turner and Hooker Reference Turner and Hooker2022.

25 Cook and Cuervo Reference Cook and Cuervo2019.

28 Boulding Reference Boulding1956, 7.

31 Ono Reference Ono2003, 740.

32 Nguyễn-võ Reference Nguyễn-võ2017, 69.

33 Tsai and Lee Reference Tsai and Lee2021. For a sophisticated critique of Andersonian theorizing applied to Taiwan, see Harrison Reference Harrison2016.

34 Yiftachel Reference Yiftachel2002, 219.

35 Tsai and Lee Reference Tsai and Lee2021, 93.

36 Chang, Bi-yu Reference Chang2015.

37 Jacobs and Liu Reference Jacobs and Liu2007.

40 Yang and Mak Reference Yang and Sam2021, 473.

43 The PRC's preferred framing emphasizes the role of treacherous individual Taiwanese politicians and the US.

44 Speech available at http://cpc.people.com.cn/n1/2019/0102/c64094-30499664.html. Accessed 11 July 2022.

47 Charon and Jeangène Vilmer Reference Charon and Vilmer2021; Hartnett and Su Reference Hartnett and Su2021. Civil society organizations monitoring misinformation like Taiwan Fact Check (https://tfc-taiwan.org.tw/) or MyGoPen (màikohphiàn 嘜擱騙 https://www.mygopen.com/) show the volume of “fake news” (i.e. fabricated, manipulated or misleading content) claiming to show Taiwanese economic decline, social decay or security vulnerabilities.

49 Rawnsley, Smyth and Sullivan Reference Rawnsley, Smyth and Sullivan2016.

52 Bolt and Brenner Reference Bolt and Brenner2004.

56 Zuo Reference Zuo2021, 551.

58 Sullivan and Sapir Reference Sullivan and Sapir2012.

59 Sullivan and Lowe Reference Sullivan and Lowe2010, 631.

60 Lams and Liao Reference Lams and Liao2011, 80.

61 A small proportion of Tsai's speech output includes interviews with Western media. Although not included in the paper, separate analysis of these English language engagements demonstrates a high level of thematic consistency with the major formal addresses that form the empirical basis of my analysis. This is consistent with Sullivan and Lowe's (Reference Sullivan and Lowe2010) argument that the ROC president's formal set-piece addresses are in part delivered in the expectation they will reach foreign leaders and publics (in translation or mediated).

62 Daddow Reference Daddow2019, 9.

64 National Security Conference, 11 March 2019, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/24140.

65 National Day, 10 October 2020, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/25628.

66 National Day, 10 October 2021, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/26253.

67 National Day, 10 October 2019, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/24860.

68 New Year, 1 January 2021, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/25836.

69 Pension reform announcement, 30 June 2017, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/21454.

70 National Day, 10 October 2020.

71 Third year anniversary, 20 May 2019, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/24394.

72 New Year, 1 January 2019, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/23999.

73 National Day, 10 October 2020.

74 National Day, 10 October 2021.

75 Second inauguration, 20 May 2020, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/25319.

76 First inauguration, 20 May 2016, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/20444.

77 National Day, 10 October 2021.

78 Apology to indigenous people, 1 August 2016, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/20603.

79 Lunar New Year, 15 February 2018, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/23129.

80 National Day, 10 October 2017, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/21662.

81 Second inauguration, 20 May 2020.

82 National Day, 10 October 2019.

84 National Security Conference, 11 March 2019.

85 National Day, 10 October 2020.

86 First inauguration, 20 May 2016.

87 National Day, 10 October 2020.

88 National Day, 10 October 2019.

89 End of year press conference, 29 December 2017, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/21895.

90 National Day, 10 October 2016, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/20773.

91 Second inauguration, 20 May 2020.

92 National Day, 10 October 2021.

93 Remarks on the Hong Kong issue, 13 June 2019, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/24467.

94 National Day, 10 October 2019.

95 National Day, 10 October 2021.

97 McConaghy Reference McConaghy2021, 39.

98 Apology to indigenous people, 1 August 2016.

99 Second inauguration, 20 May 2020.

100 National Day, 10 October 2019.

101 First inauguration, 20 May 2016.

102 National Day, 10 October 2016.

103 New Year, 1 January 2022, https://www.president.gov.tw/NEWS/26475.

104 National Day, 10 October 2021.

105 Hsiao, Bi-khim Reference Hsiao2022.

106 First inauguration, 20 May 2016.

107 National Day, 10 October 2017.

108 Wu, Jieh-min Reference Wu, Shih and Liao2015, 281.

109 National Day, 10 October 2020.

112 Schubert and Lee Reference Schubert and Lee2021.

114 Wu, Chung-li, and Lin Reference Wu and Lin2019.

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