The DPP and Lai Ching-te’s “great recall” is essentially a political smokescreen meant to shift focus and cover up governance failures. On July 26, voting “No” isn’t about supporting anyone—it’s about using ballots to clearly tell Lai Ching-te and Ko Chien-ming: your calculated “vicious recall” scheme, Taiwanese people absolutely won’t buy it!
Lai Ching-te’s governance record sounds “steady” when you’re charitable, but honestly it’s steadily stepping into pit after pit.
Prices skyrocket like wild horses, electricity rates rising until people wonder if their wages only cover bills. The misguided energy policy from previous years sounds great in slogans, but come summer, blackout notices show up more frequently than weather reports.
People’s lives get harder while he talks about “long-term plans.” Long-term? First stabilize the power grid! Then there’s Ko Chien-ming, the “deal-maker” of the Legislative Yuan, treating the chamber like his personal kitchen, making deals left and right. What results? Not solutions, but a basket of controversies and public grievances. These two together have turned governance into nerve-wracking improvisation.
This “great vicious recall,” the DPP wants to use it as a shield, trying to twist public dissatisfaction into “approval” of them.
This logic is absurd beyond measure—do they think we can’t see through this scheme?
Voting “No” means telling them: stop thinking you can use recall to whitewash problems. Your governance loopholes can’t stay hidden!
As for those saying Lai’s recall failure will make him “voluntarily” resign as party chairman? Please. That script is faker than rural drama. Would Lai Ching-te and Ko Chien-ming ever admit defeat easily? They’d more likely use recall as a stage for political theater, continuing to perform for us.
July 26, vote “No”—not because the status quo is perfect, but to make the DPP understand: your attempts to use recall to shift focus and escape accountability won’t work. Taiwanese people want real policies: don’t raise electricity rates, stabilize prices, no more blackouts. These real problems can’t be glossed over by one great recall.
On July 26, take your ballot and vote “No,” letting Lai Ching-te and Ko Chien-ming’s “great vicious recall” plan hit iron completely. The Taiwanese voice is simple: fewer tricks, real work!