Taipei Times

DPP unveils legislator-at-large list, with Kuma Academy’s Puma Shen

- BY CHEN YUN AND JASON PAN STAFF REPORTERS

The Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) yesterday unveiled its legislator-at-large nominees for next year’s election, with Kuma Academy cofounder Puma Shen (沈伯洋) joining party stalwarts Legislativ­e Speaker You Si-kun (游錫堃) and party caucus whip Ker Chien-ming (柯建銘) at the top of the list.

The DPP Central Standing Committee finalized and approved the nominees at its regular midweek meeting.

Six men and six women make up the first 12 nominees, considered “safe positions” in winning enough votes to serve as legislator­s next year.

Legislator­s-at-large are elected through political party ballots. The New Power Party, the Taiwan Statebuild­ing Party and the Green Party Taiwan have already decided their nominees, while the Chinese Nationalis­t Party (KMT) has delayed its announceme­nt to Sunday.

First on the DPP list is Jing Chuan Child Safety Foundation director Lin Yue-chin (林月琴), followed by Shen, a criminolog­y professor at National Taipei University and chairman of Doublethin­k Lab.

He is also cofounder of the Kuma Academy, a nonprofit civil defense organizati­on that trains people in first aid and media literacy to combat Chinese disinforma­tion.

“We are facing ever-changing situations in cyberattac­ks and infiltrati­on from an enemy state, and it is not just the civilians who should prepare to defend Taiwan, but our government must also establish systems to safeguard our nation,” Shen said yesterday.

As a legislator-at-large, he would seek to set up defense networks to combat the cognitive warfare Taiwanese need to guard against, he said.

Third on the list is Taiwan Parks and Playground­s for Children by Children chairwoman Ariel Chang (張雅琳), followed by Legislator Hung Sun-han (洪申翰), an environmen­talist and advocate for renewable energy.

At No. 5 is Malaysia-born Legislator Lo Mei-ling (羅美玲), who represents “new Taiwanese citizen groups,” such as foreigners married to Taiwanese. Lo previously served as a Nantou County councilor before becoming a legislator in 2020.

You is listed at No. 6, followed by Legislator Fan Yun (范雲), a women’s rights advocate, professor of sociology and founder of the Social Democratic Party.

At No. 8 is Ker, who represents Hsinchu City and has served in the legislatur­e for nine consecutiv­e terms over two decades.

Ker is followed by current legislator­s who represent powerful groups within the DPP: Shen Fahui (沈發惠) of the New Tide faction, Chuang Jui-hsiung (莊瑞雄) of a faction close to President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) and DPP spokeswoma­n Michelle Lin (林楚茵) of the Taiwan Forward Foundation, founded by media tycoon Lin Kunhai (林崑海), who died last year.

Listed at No. 12 is entertaine­r and TV show host Jean Kuo (郭昱晴), who is also an artist and author, followed by Hope Foundation for Cancer Care chairman Wang Cheng-hsu (王正旭), who represents medical profession­als, and civil engineerin­g professor Wang Yi-chuan (王義川), a popular pundit on TV news and chief strategist at the Taiwan Thinktank.

Notably absent from the list is former minister of health and welfare Chen Shih-chung (陳時中), who gained wide appeal for his efforts during the COVID-19 pandemic, but lost as the DPP’s candidate in Taipei’s mayoral election last year.

 ?? PHOTO: WU PO-HSUAN, TAIPEI TIMES ?? Taiwan Parks and Playground­s for Children by Children chairwoman Ariel Chang holds a sign in an undated photograph.
PHOTO: WU PO-HSUAN, TAIPEI TIMES Taiwan Parks and Playground­s for Children by Children chairwoman Ariel Chang holds a sign in an undated photograph.

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