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Legislative Yuan
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===Democratization=== The members of the Legislative Yuan with extended terms remained until 31 December 1991, when as part of subsequent Judicial Yuan ruling they were forced to retire and the members elected in 1989 remained until the 161 members of the Second Legislative Yuan were elected in December 1992. The third LY, elected in 1995, had 157 members serving 3-year terms. The fourth LY, elected in 1998, was expanded to 225 members in part to include legislators from the abolished provincial legislature of [[Taiwan Province]]. The Legislative Yuan greatly increased its prominence after the [[2000 Taiwan presidential election|2000 presidential elections]] in Taiwan when the [[Executive Yuan]] and [[President of the Republic of China|presidency]] was controlled by the [[Democratic Progressive Party]] while the Legislative Yuan had a large majority of [[Kuomintang]] members. The legislative elections in late 2001 produced a contentious situation in which the [[pan-blue coalition]] has only a thin majority over the governing [[pan-green coalition]] in the legislature,<ref name="Carr">{{Cite web|url=http://psephos.adam-carr.net/taiwan/taiwan2001.txt |title=Taiwan |year=2001 |last=Carr |first=Adam |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041012143734/http://psephos.adam-carr.net/taiwan/taiwan2001.txt |archive-date=October 12, 2004 }}</ref> making the passage of bills often dependent on the votes of a few defectors and independents. Because of the party situation there have been constitutional conflicts between the Legislative Yuan and the executive branch over the process of appointment for the [[Premier of the Republic of China|premier]] and whether the president has the power to call a special session. Amid 70% public support, the Legislative Yuan voted 217β1 on 23 August 2004 for a package of amendments to: * Halve the number of seats from 225 to 113 * Switch to a single-member district [[parallel voting]] electoral system * Increase the terms of members from 3 to 4 years, to synchronize the legislative and presidential elections. (The change was implemented for the next election cycle, as the [[2008 Taiwan legislative election|legislative election]] was held in January 2008, and the [[2008 Taiwan presidential election|presidential election]] followed in March.) The new electoral system installed in 2008 includes 73 plurality seats (one for each electoral district), 6 seats for [[Taiwan aborigine|aboriginals]], with the remaining 34 seats to be filled from [[party-list proportional representation|party lists]]. Every county has a minimum of 1 electoral district, thereby guaranteed at least one seat in the legislature, while half of the proportionally represented seats drawn from party lists must be women. Additionally, the Legislative Yuan proposed to abolish the National Assembly. Future amendments would still be proposed by the LY by a three-fourths vote from a quorum of at least three-fourths of all members of the Legislature. After a mandatory 180-day promulgation period, the amendment would have to be ratified by an absolute majority of ''all'' eligible voters of the ROC ''irrespective'' of voter turnout. The latter requirement would allow a party to kill a referendum proposal by asking that their voters boycott the vote as was done by the KMT with the referendums associated with the [[2004 Taiwan presidential election|2004 presidential election]]. A DPP proposal to allow the citizens the right to initiate constitutional referendums was pulled off the table, due to a lack of support. The proposal was criticized for dangerously lowering the threshold for considering a constitutional amendment. Whereas a three-fourths vote of the LY would require that any proposed constitutional amendment have a broad political [[Consensus decision-making|consensus]] behind it, a citizen's initiative would allow a fraction of the electorate to force a constitutional referendum. It was feared that allowing this to occur would result in a referendum on [[Taiwan independence]] which would likely result in a crisis with the [[People's Republic of China]]. The Legislative Yuan also proposed to give itself the power to summon the president for an annual "state of the nation" address and launch a [[Recall election|recall]] of the president and vice president (proposed by one fourth and approved by two thirds of the legislators and be submitted to a nationwide referendum for approval or rejection by majority vote). The Legislative Yuan will also have the power to propose the [[impeachment]] of the president or vice president to the [[Council of Grand Justices]]. An ''ad hoc'' National Assembly was [[2005 Taiwan National Assembly election|elected and formed in 2005]] to ratify the amendments. The downsized Legislative Yuan took effect after [[2008 Taiwan legislative election|the 2008 elections]]. On 20 July 2007, the Legislative Yuan passed a [[Lobbying]] Act.<ref>Shih Hsiu-chuan [http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2007/07/21/2003370609 "Taiwan becomes third country to pass Lobbying Act"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929153542/http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2007/07/21/2003370609 |date=2007-09-29 }}'', Taipei Times, 7/21/2007''</ref>
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