| CONGRATULATING
THE PEOPLE OF TAIWAN AND REAFFIRMING U.S. POLICY
Mr. LOTT.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed
to the immediate consideration of S. Con. Res. 99, submitted
earlier today by me.
The PRESIDING
OFFICER. The clerk will report the concurrent resolution by
title.
The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
A concurrent
resolution (S. Con. Res. 99) congratulating the people of
Taiwan for the successful conclusion of Presidential elections
on March 18, 2000, and reaffirming United States policy toward
Taiwan and the People's Republic of China.
There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider
the concurrent resolution.
Mr. BIDEN.
Mr. President, on March 18 the people of Taiwan went to the
polls and chose their next president through a free and fair
multiparty election. The winner of a close three-way race,
Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party, will be
inaugurated in May. I had the pleasure of meeting with
Mr. Chen in Washington in 1997 when he was the mayor of Taipei.
I was impressed by his political smarts and his commitment
to building a more democratic and prosperous Taiwan.
I also
found him to be genuinely committed to improving relations
with the mainland.
I believe
that Taiwan's election provides a fresh opportunity for the
people of Taiwan and the people of China to reach out and
resolve their differences peacefully through dialog on the
basis of mutual respect.
I hope
that leaders on both sides of the Strait will seize this opportunity
and begin to lay the foundation of trust, goodwill, and understanding
which must precede true reconciliation.
The inauguration
of Chen will end the virtual monopoly of power the Nationalist
Party has exercised for most of the past 50 years. This peaceful
transition of power at the top of Taiwan's political system
will mark the maturation of their democracy, and it is an
event worthy of our profound respect and hearty congratulations.
It was
only 13 years ago that Taiwan lifted martial law and ushered
in a new period of open political discourse and expanded civil
liberty. Prior to that, Taiwan's leaders did not tolerate
dissent and moved swiftly and sometimes ruthlessly to silence
their critics. Taiwan's president-elect knows this well,
because he got his start in politics as a young crusading
lawyer working to promote transparency, freedom of speech,
and freedom of assembly.
Taiwan's
emergence as a genuine multiparty democracy is a significant
development in the long history of China. It is all the more
remarkable given the fact that China's leaders in Beijing
have done their level best to intimidate Taiwan's voters and
prevent them from exercising this fundamental right.
I cannot
help but wonder how average Chinese on the mainland must view
Taiwan's remarkable transformation. On the one hand, the people
of China have a deep devotion to national unity and apparently
are prepared to use force against Taiwan if it were to declare
its independence.
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As Zhang
Yunling of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing
explained to New York Times correspondent Elisabeth Rosenthal
on March 20, ``China was divided when it was weak, and now
that it is getting strong again, people's nationalist feeling
rises and they feel strongly it is time to reunite the country.''
On the
other hand, the people of China are beginning to form their
own impressions of Taiwan, no longer content only to listen
to the government's official propaganda demonizing the island.
Some even admit publicly to a certain grudging admiration
for Taiwan's accomplishments and hope their own government
will do nothing to precipitate a crisis.
As one
22-year-old Beijing University physics major told Rosenthal,
``I think both sides will have to make adjustments to their
policies. After all Taiwan is democratic now, and the
people have exercised their right to choose a president.''
Let me
read the words of that university student again, ``. . . the
people have exercised their right to choose a president.''
In America, we take democratic transitions of power for granted.
But in China, and until recently on Taiwan, it was a revolutionary
concept. And yet that is precisely what the people of Taiwan
did on March 18. They changed their leadership through a peaceful,
orderly, democratic process. They did so, by all accounts,
because they were frustrated with corruption, cronyism, campaign
finance abuses, and bureaucratic inefficiency.
These
are all faults that China's communist government has in spades.
And with Internet use exploding in China, and with cross-straits
commercial ties now in the tens of billions of dollars, there
is no way that the people of China will not discover what
is happening on Taiwan.
And they
may become inspired not only by the island's prosperity, but
also by its peaceful democratic revolution. I predict they
will begin to ask themselves, ``How come we don't enjoy the
same standard of living and the same political rights here
on the mainland?'' Taiwan's people are responsible for
the island's miraculous transformation from authoritarian
rule and poverty to democracy and prosperity. They deserve
all of the credit. But the people of the United States have
reason to feel a little bit of pride as well.
If Taiwan
wins the Oscar for Best Actor, then we at least get a nomination
for Best Supporting Actor. The United States commitment to
Taiwan's security under the terms of the Taiwan Relations
Act helped create the stable environment in which Taiwan has
thrived. The other critical component of cross-Strait
stability has been our adherence to a ``One-China'' policy,
in which we maintain that disputes between the two sides of
the Taiwan Strait must be settled peacefully, and that the
future relationship between the People's Republic of China
and Taiwan must be determined in accordance with the wishes
of the people of China and the people of Taiwan. Maintaining
a peaceful, stable environment in the Taiwan Strait has fostered
economic growth throughout East Asia. It has also aided the
emergence of democratic societies in the Philippines, Thailand,
South Korea, Indonesia, and Taiwan.
In the
past decade, more people have come under democratic rule in
East Asia than were liberated in Europe by the end of the
cold war and the collapse of the Soviet Union. This remarkable
accomplishment would not have been possible without United
States leadership.
Given
all that Taiwan has accomplished in such a short span, I look
forward to the future with renewed hope that someday all people
of China will enjoy the rights and standard of living enjoyed
by those fortunate few who live on Taiwan.
Mr. LOTT.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the concurrent
resolution be agreed to, the preamble be agreed to, the motion
to reconsider be laid upon the table, and any statements relating
to the resolution be printed in the Record.
The PRESIDING
OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The concurrent resolution (S. Con. Res. 99) was agreed to.
The preamble was agreed to.
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