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...Both were highly critical of the Chinese Communist party....
...as part of a greater Chinese nation....
...The Sullivan-Wang meeting also comes one month after Lai Ching-te won the presidential election in Taiwan. China views Lai, who will be inaugurated in May, as a dangerous separatist....
...The Chinese embassy in Washington said Beijing “firmly opposes the US having any form of official interaction with Taiwan and interfering in Taiwan affairs in any way or under any pretext”....
...Biden held a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in San Francisco in November at which they talked about the need to ease turbulence in the relationship....
...This was not Lai’s only brush with Taiwan’s tech sector....
...It has also rebuffed Lai’s calls for a resumption of dialogue....
...The 76-year-old mogul, who has already spent almost three years in prison, was among the Chinese territory’s most well-known democracy champions and a prominent critic of the Chinese Communist party....
...But Lai’s remarks were the strongest yet during the current election....
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...Ma, who left office in 2016, said Chinese people on both sides of the Strait “are absolutely wise enough to prevent” war....
...Analyst Nick Lai flagged concerns over the company’s slow rollout of models and an increasingly crowded Chinese EV mass market....
...The KMT says Taiwan belongs to a broader Chinese nation but disagrees with the Chinese Communist party over which state represents it....
...China has denounced Lai as a dangerous separatist....
...Despite the constraints on Lai, many Chinese observers do not harbour illusions that this marks a long-term drop in support for the DPP....
...Lai and other Taiwan officials should maintain the rhetorical discipline shown by Tsai during her presidency and seek to foster at least people-to-people exchanges with mainland Chinese counterparts....
...“That creates a force within Taiwanese society which has a certain constraining effect on Lai Ching-te’s government.”...
...“That is a loss for China, too,” said Lai....
...Lai received only 40 per cent of the vote and the DPP lost control of the legislature, a result which the Chinese government said showed that the DPP did not represent mainstream public opinion....
...Taiwan has lost one of its few diplomatic allies after Nauru switched recognition to Beijing, a sign of increasing Chinese pressure on the country after it elected Lai Ching-te its new president....
...The sides also discussed Taiwan, following the election this month of Lai Ching-te as president. Beijing views Lai as a dangerous separatist and worry that he will push Taiwan towards independence....
...Relations with China and national identity — long the main dividing lines between the pro-Taiwan DPP and the KMT, which embraces a broader Chinese identity — have become even more dominant in this year’s...
...in the Chinese civil war and now Taiwan’s largest opposition party....
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