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Court blow for Ma over speaker’s expulsion

Published: 01 Oct 2013 - 02:46 am | Last Updated: 30 Jan 2022 - 01:09 am

TAIPEI: Taiwan’s parliamentary speaker scored another victory in the battle for his job yesterday after the high court upheld a ruling against his party’s decision to expel him over claims of influence-peddling.

Earlier this month, the Taipei district court granted Wang Jin-pyng’s request for a provisional injunction against the Kuomintang (KMT) party, allowing him to hold his party membership and therefore continue as speaker.

The party, led by President Ma Ying-jeou, appealed the ruling, but the appeal was thrown out by the high court yesterday.

“The appeal was rejected,” the court’s spokesman Hung Kuang-tsan told reporters.

The KMT said the party would appeal to the Supreme Court.

Wang, 72, was a KMT heavyweight known for his grassroots influence. His removal has sparked fears of a split within the party in a deepening political scandal that has already seen two top government officials, including justice minister, resign.

Ma had said Wang was “unfit” to head the legislature after he was accused of influencing prosecutors in the court case of Ker Chien-ming, the major opposition Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) party whip in parliament.

A twist developed last week when prosecutors admitted that they had tapped lawmakers’ phones while investigating Ker’s case. The prosecutors insisted the wire tapping was legal, but the DPP compared it to the Watergate scandal in the United States that resulted in the resignation of then-president Richard Nixon in 1974, and demanded Ma step down.

AFP