英文媒体关于中国的报道汇总 2025-10-18
October 19, 2025 3 min 626 words
这篇报道主要介绍了台湾反对党国民党(KMT)的主席选举,最终由前立法委员郑丽文胜出。报道着重强调了中国干预选举的指控,称有视频攻击候选人之一侯友宜并支持郑丽文,但台湾国安局并未明确表示这些视频来自中国。报道还提到了台湾与北京的关系,以及国民党与北京的友好关系。 评论: 这篇报道以一种暗含偏见的视角描述中国干预台湾选举,却没有提供确凿证据支持这一指控。报道中提到的视频攻击和支持不同候选人,但台湾国安局并未证实其来源为中国,而中国方面也否认了干预选举的说法。这种缺乏证据的指控很容易引起误导,给读者留下中国试图操纵台湾选举的印象。此外,报道中关于台湾与北京关系的描述也过于简单化,忽略了台湾内部对与大陆关系的复杂态度。报道应该更加客观地呈现事实,而不是通过暗示和影射来塑造一种偏见。
- Taiwan’s main opposition party elects new leader in a race clouded by claims of China meddling
摘要
1. Taiwan’s main opposition party elects new leader in a race clouded by claims of China meddling
中文标题:台湾主要反对党选举新领导人,选举中有中国干预的指控。
内容摘要:台湾主要反对党国民党(KMT)于2025年10月18日选举产生新党首,胜选者是前立法委员郑丽文,她是唯一的女性候选人并主张改革。此次选举充满竞争,且伴随有中国干预的指控。国民党虽在过去的三次总统选举中败给倾向独立的执政党民进党,但依然在立法机构保持着强大的政治影响力,并有能力与盟友组成多数派。 郑丽文计划在11月上任,未来将影响台湾的对中关系及其他重要政策。她的竞选承诺是把国民党从一群“羊”转变为“狮子”,希望能重新赢得年轻人的支持。与此同时,部分国民党成员指控中国在选举中进行有组织的干预,台当局的国家安全局表示发现一千多个关于选举的视频,且不少来自境外。对此,郑丽文呼吁党内团结,避免内部分裂造成的损害。
Taiwan’s main opposition party elects new leader in a race clouded by claims of China meddling
https://apnews.com/article/taiwan-nationalist-kmt-cheng-china-ec700a517f43c35b372a7e049646d74b2025-10-18T11:36:42Z
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan ’s main opposition Nationalist Party chose a former lawmaker as its new chairperson on Saturday in a competitive election clouded by allegations of China’s meddling.
By a wide margin, Cheng Li-wun — the only female candidate in the race who positioned herself as a reformist — defeated former Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin and four others contesting the leadership of the China-friendly party. The Nationalists, also known as the KMT, maintain strong political influence in Taiwan despite losing three consecutive presidential elections to the independence-leaning ruling Democratic Progressive Party.
The party holds enough seats to form a majority bloc with its allies in the legislature and survived two recall elections just months ago that were sparked by concerns over their lawmakers passing changes seen as diminishing the power of the executive and favoring China, which considers the island as its own territory.
Scheduled to take office in November, Cheng could influence how Taiwan handles its relationship with Beijing and other key policies and domestic and international political matters. She will also anchor the party in the 2026 local elections and in the 2028 presidential race against the incumbent Lai Ching-te.
During her campaign, Cheng pledged to turn KMT from a flock of “sheep” into “lions,” hoping the party could regain support from young people. Cheng was once a DPP member.
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Beijing has a particularly strained relationship with Lai, whom it accuses of being a separatist. It has threatened to use force to bring Taiwan under its control, if necessary, and has increasingly mobilized military, diplomatic and economic pressure in an attempt to undermine Lai’s administration.
Traditionally, KMT has had warmer ties with Beijing, with Chinese politicians visiting for exchanges. Supporters of the KMT see the ties as beneficial to the island democracy’s stability and economy, but its critics are wary of the influence Beijing exerts.
Over the past week, Jaw Shaw-kong, Hau’s supporter in the party, alleged that China was involved in an organized interference, citing videos attacking Hau and supporting Cheng.
The head of Taiwan’s National Security Bureau, Tsai Ming-yen, said it found over 1,000 videos discussing the election on TikTok, in addition to 23 YouTube accounts posting related content, with over half of the YouTube accounts based outside of Taiwan. He did not say which candidates these videos supported or directly answer whether they were based in China.
In response to allegations over foreign interference, Cheng had previously called for party unity and cautioned against internal fighting, saying it would only hurt the KMT and allow other parties to exploit divisions, Taiwan’s Central News Agency reported.
Chen Binhua, a spokesperson for China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, on Wednesday said the election was the party’s internal affair and the views of some mainland Chinese internet users did not represent the government position.
Under late leader Chiang Kai-shek, the Nationalists rose to power in China during the 1920s, fighting invasion by Japan and then Mao Zedong’s communists, before fleeing to Taiwan with the remnants of his forces when Mao’s insurgents took power. Taiwan began transitioning from martial law rule to multiparty democracy in the 1980s and held its first direct presidential election in 1996.