Saturday’s poll will affect 23 million Taiwanese, and is set to shape the geopolitical posture of an island sat between two superpowers China and the US.
Taiwan’s voters packed colourful election rallies in the lead up to Saturday’s presidential and legislative elections. The vote is being closely watched owing to its potential implications for cross-Strait relations.
Across the self-ruled island, voters waved Taiwanese flags and held up homemade posters proclaiming support for their favourite presidential candidate.
“With William Lai Ching-te and Hsiao Bi-khim, build a prosperous Taiwan,” one woman’s cardboard sign read at a Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) rally in Taipei. The names referred to the presidential and vice-presidential candidate of the incumbent liberal party.
Lai faces Hou Yu-ih of the Kuomintang, which favours warmer ties with Beijing, and Ko Wen-je, whose Taiwan People’s Party aims for a middle ground with Beijing.
Saturday’s poll will affect 23 million Taiwanese, and is set to shape the geopolitical posture of an island sat between two superpowers China and the US.
Kyle Lam is a Hong Kong Baptist University graduate who has worked as a photojournalist and reporter since 2013. His work has been published by HK01, the European Pressphoto Agency, Bloomberg and Ming Pao. Lam is the recipient of several prizes from the Hong Kong Press Photographers Association and Human Rights Press Awards.