Try GOLD - Free
Strait Talk
Time
|June 24, 2024
TAIWAN'S NEW PRESIDENT LAI CHING-TE IS TAKING A HARD LINE ON CHINA. BEIJING IS NOT AMUSED
AS POLITICAL TRANSITIONS GO, THE ASCENT OF LAI CHING-TE to the presidency of Taiwan had pretty much everything. On May 15, the outgoing President signed off amid a riot of yellow spandex and feather boas as Nymphia Wind, winner of the latest season of RuPaul's Drag Race, led drag queens through the Presidential Office Building. Two days later a real riot erupted in Taiwan's legislature as lawmakers traded insults and punches over a bill that would heighten scrutiny powers over the government, and tens of thousands protested in the street. When Lai, who also goes by the anglicized name William, finally took office, on May 20, his inauguration speech so riled Beijing that it dispatched fighter jets and warships in "punishment" exercises designed to demonstrate its ability to "seize power."
"So it has been a very smooth transition," Lai tells TIME, with a straight face, in his first interview as President. "So far so good."
A stoic embrace of peril and pandemonium is perhaps essential for the leader of a vibrant, febrile democracy-not least one perched beside an authoritarian superpower determined to bring it to heel. Taiwan became politically self-ruling in 1949 at the end of China's civil war. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has never controlled the island of 23 million, which still officially uses the archaic title Republic of China (ROC). But Chinese President Xi Jinping considers it a renegade province whose "reunification" is a "historical inevitability" and has repeatedly threatened force to achieve it.
Lai and, at right, Hsiao Bi-khim, his choice for Vice President, at an election-night rally on Jan. 13This story is from the June 24, 2024 edition of Time.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Time
Time
Susan Dell & Michael Dell
CROWDED AS A BAZAAR AND CLUTTERED WITH screens, the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange is a bubble of overstimulation, not exactly a place you’d want to bring a child.
9 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
TV's first Lord of the Flies adaptation is worth the wait
LORD OF THE FLIES LOOMS SO LARGE in the allegorical canon that it’s easy to forget the book is only 72 years old.
2 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
UNDER PRESSURE
Ahead of the FIFA World Cup, all eyes are on U.S. star Christian Pulisic.
13 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
THE REVOLUTION WILL BE ZANY
Boots Riley's I Love Boosters is a madcap ode to the power of collective action
6 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
Victoria Beckham The former Posh Spice on life in the public eye, evolving her fashion and beauty brand, and the validation that came from her Netflix docuseries
How has being a self-described 'control freak' served or undermined you in business?
3 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
Idris Elba & Sabrina Dhowre Elba
IDRIS ELBA’S BODY DOESN’T KNOW WHEN HE’S acting.
9 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
How Karl Urban conquered geekdom
HE’S FOUGHT ORCS FROM HORSEBACK IN MIDDLE-EARTH, explored the final frontier on the starship Enterprise, and wielded dual machine guns in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but now Karl Urban is really in the thick of it.
6 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
Climate Is Everything
DEEP OCEAN HEAT IS MOVING closer to Antarctica, threatening the stability of the continent's ice sheets, a new decades-long study has revealed. The study in the journal Communications Earth & Environment confirms that a warm mass known as circumpolar deep water has expanded and shifted toward the Antarctic continental shelf over the past 20 years.
2 mins
May 25, 2026
Time
Ted Turner
Nonstop-news visionary
1 min
May 25, 2026
Time
HOW NICKI MINAJ WENT MAGA
The rapper is the cornerstone of Trump plan to turn celebrity surrogates into cultural currency.
11 mins
May 25, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

