Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Tuan Yi kang

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Nationality
  
Taiwanese

Spouse
  
Chen Li-Wen

Constituency
  
Taipei 2nd district

Occupation
  
Politician

Parents
  
Tuan Shou-Yu

Tuan Yi-kang httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsaa

Born
  
14 November 1963 (age 53) Taipei, Taiwan (
1963-11-14
)

Political party
  
Democratic Progressive Party

Alma mater
  
National Taiwan University

Education
  
National Taiwan University

Party
  
Democratic Progressive Party

Similar
  
Han Kuo‑yu, Yu Mei‑nu, Chen Chi‑mai, Wang Ju‑hsuan, Hsiao Bi‑khim

Profiles

Tuan Yi-kang (Chinese: 段宜康; born 14 November 1963) is a Taiwanese politician. A former leader of the Democratic Progressive Party's now-abolished New Tide faction, he has served on the party's Central Standing Committee, the Taipei City Council and the Legislative Yuan.

Contents

Education

Tuan was born in Taipei, graduated from Ta-Chih Junior High School and Chung Kung Senior High School, before attending National Taiwan University, where he earned a bachelor's degree in political science.

Political career

Tuan started his political career by working for legislators Lu Hsiu-yi, Hung Chi-chang and Yeh Chu-lan. He was Kao Chih-peng's campaign manager in Kao's 1993 run for Penghu County Magistrate. In 1994, Tuan was elected to the Taipei City Council, and served until 2002. Tuan took office in the Legislative Yuan later that year, and was defeated in his 2005 reelection campaign. He was the chief convener of the New Tide faction, before it was officially dissolved in 2006. In 2008, Tuan served within the Democratic Progressive Party as deputy secretary-general, resigning in March. He ran against Kuomintang incumbent Lin Yu-fang in the 2008 legislative elections and lost. Tuan was elected to the DPP Central Standing Committee in 2010. He contested the 2012 legislative elections as a candidate for Taipei's second district, but later withdrew from the district party primary. He won a seat in the Legislative Yuan through the proportional representation ballot. He was also reelected to the CSC. Tuan was placed on the proportional representation list again for the 2016 elections, and won an at-large seat.

Controversy

Lien Chan's daughter Lien Hui-hsin sued Tuan for slander in 2004, for alleging that she had helped her father commit tax evasion.

Tuan claimed in January 2015 that President Ma Ying-jeou illegally accepted NT$200 million from various businesspeople during his 2008 presidential campaign. Later that month Ma filed a lawsuit against Tuan for NT$10 million. In February 2016, the Taipei District Court ordered Tuan to pay Ma NT$600,000. The penalty was retained in a December 2016 Taiwan High Court ruling.

In December 2015, Tuan accused Wang Ju-hsuan of improperly profiting in the real estate market by acquiring multiple properties intended to house military families. Wang sued Tuan for defamation, but the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office dropped the case, and also found that none of Wang's real estate deals were illegal.

Fellow Democratic Progressive Party member and incumbent Hualien City mayor Tien Chih-hsuan died in May 2016, and the DPP lost the subsequent by-election in August. After the results of the vote were announced, Tuan made Facebook posts that were critical of Hualien voters, for which he apologized. In September, Tuan accused Radio Taiwan International of "assisting" unification efforts, by renting low-cost airtime to the China-based Guangdong Television.

References

Tuan Yi-kang Wikipedia