Politics & Government Guide in Taiwan
Political system, governance structure, stability indicators, and democratic institutions
Taiwan operates as a semi-presidential republic under President Lai Ching-te of the Democratic Progressive Party since May 2024. The unicameral Legislative Yuan is divided without a majority party, with the Kuomintang holding a slim edge at 52 seats. The political landscape features tensions over cross-strait relations amid a hung legislature.
Government Type
Semi-presidential republic
Legal System
Civil law system
Head of State
President Lai Ching-te(since 2024)
Head of Government
Premier Cho Jung-tai(Democratic Progressive Party)since 2024
Legislature
Major Political Parties
Centre-left to left-wing
Centre-right
Big tent
Voting Rights
Citizens aged 20 and above have full voting rights in presidential, legislative, and local elections.
Recent Developments
- Lai Ching-te of the DPP won the 2024 presidential election with 40.05% of the vote
- No party secured a legislative majority in 2024 elections: KMT 52 seats, DPP 51 seats, TPP 8 seats
- Han Kuo-yu of the KMT elected President of the Legislative Yuan in February 2024
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