Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) presidential candidate Frank Hsieh (謝長廷) yesterday cast doubt on Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) rival Ma Ying-jeou's (馬英九) comments on his green card, asking Ma to "tell the whole truth" within two days.
"I praise Ma for telling part of the truth [Monday night], but he didn't tell the whole truth. Honesty is the best policy. Ma has two days to add or make corrections. I will sort out the information I have and go public in two days," Hsieh said.
On Monday, Hsieh said he had documents proving that Ma still has a green card. Yesterday he said Ma's wife Chow Mei-ching (周美青) was also a green card holder.
"Two out of Ma's four family members are green card holders and [Ma's eldest daughter] is a US citizen. They can emigrate to the US any time. If a nation's leader and his family get themselves life jackets, how can he say he is closely bound to the fate of Taiwan?" Hsieh said.
Ma called an emergency press conference on Monday night to respond to questions Hsieh raised on Sunday. He said he had obtained a green card while he was living in the US, sometime around 1977.
But Ma said both his and his wife's green cards became invalid in the 1980s when they applied for visas at the American Institute in Taiwan to travel to the US.
Hsieh, however, said yesterday afternoon that he knew the number of Ma's green card.
"Ma has admitted he was once a US green card holder. I have no doubt about that. Now the problem is that Ma has to prove he revoked the card as he has said. Please tell the public when you gave up the card, how and where," Hsieh said.
He refused to comment on Ma's remark that the green cards were automatically invalidated when the couple applied for US visas.
"Ma has to show us which law and regulation his argument was based on," Hsieh said.
In response to Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng's (王金平) comment that economic issues were more important, Hsieh said, "When a presidential candidate lies about something, he may also make empty promises when speaking about the economy."
At a press conference in Changhua Country last night, Ma dared Hsieh to present the evidence he said could prove that Ma had not told the truth over the green card issue.
"No matter what information you have, please present it to the public now. You don't need to wait two days before showing it," Ma said.
"Please present the evidence now and I will respond. I have responded to Mr Hsieh's allegations sincerely and clearly over the past two days," he said.
At the same press conference, Ma camp spokesman Lo Chih-chiang (
"Can you publicly guarantee that none of your family members have ever engaged in any under-the-table political deals, including the receipt of political donations?" Lo said.
Earlier yesterday, Ma said that his responses on the issue had been consistent.
Ma said he gave a negative answer on Sunday because he was responding to a question on whether he and his family currently held green cards.
"We have given them up. We don't have them now. I am telling the truth. My [earlier] responses were not different," he said when approached in Tainan. "What I said yesterday [Monday night] was that we used to hold green cards, but we gave them up. This does not contradict what I said the previous day."
Ma said based on his understanding, green cards become invalid if the cardholder enters the US on a visa.
"As long as you don't want to use it, [the US] would assume that you want to give it up. Since green cards represent an official document granting holders permission to enter the US without a visa, if you decide to apply for a US visa, this means you don't want to use the green card anymore," he said, adding that cardholders are not obliged to issue any formal proclamation giving up the cards.
When asked if having a green card indicated disloyalty to Taiwan, Ma said he and his wife applied for the cards because they needed student loans and job opportunities to support themselves when he was studying for his doctorate.
"We followed the procedure stipulated in US laws to apply for green cards. I don't remember the exact time, but it [the application] took a few years," he said, adding that it was the US Citizenship and Immigration Services that determined whether to issue them green cards.
According to the US Department of Homeland Security, a green card holder may lose his or her permanent residence status if the person commits an act that makes him or her removable from the US under the law in section 237 of the Immigration and Nationality Act. A person may be brought before the immigration courts to determine his or her right to remain a permanent resident.
A person may be found to have abandoned his or her permanent resident status after moving to another country to live permanently; remaining outside of the US for more than one year without obtaining a re-entry permit or returning resident visa; remaining outside of the US for more than two years after issuance of a re-entry permit without obtaining a returning resident visa; failing to file income tax returns while living outside of the US for any period; or declaring themselves a "non-immigrant" on their US tax returns.
Ma said it was "unnecessary" for him to tell others what cards he holds since "this was something I gave up 20 years ago."
When asked if he felt that he had fallen into Hsieh's "trap," Ma said he understands that presidential candidates are subject to public scrutiny.
When asked if his daughter Lesley Ma (
Outgoing KMT Legislator Joanna Lei (
KMT spokeswoman Chen Shu-rong (
Wu Ching-chi (
"[Former Academia Sinica president] Lee Yuan-tseh (
Additional reporting by Jenny W. Hsu
AIR SUPPORT: The Ministry of National Defense thanked the US for the delivery, adding that it was an indicator of the White House’s commitment to the Taiwan Relations Act Deputy Minister of National Defense Po Horng-huei (柏鴻輝) and Representative to the US Alexander Yui on Friday attended a delivery ceremony for the first of Taiwan’s long-awaited 66 F-16C/D Block 70 jets at a Lockheed Martin Corp factory in Greenville, South Carolina. “We are so proud to be the global home of the F-16 and to support Taiwan’s air defense capabilities,” US Representative William Timmons wrote on X, alongside a photograph of Taiwanese and US officials at the event. The F-16C/D Block 70 jets Taiwan ordered have the same capabilities as aircraft that had been upgraded to F-16Vs. The batch of Lockheed Martin
GRIDLOCK: The National Fire Agency’s Special Search and Rescue team is on standby to travel to the countries to help out with the rescue effort A powerful earthquake rocked Myanmar and neighboring Thailand yesterday, killing at least three people in Bangkok and burying dozens when a high-rise building under construction collapsed. Footage shared on social media from Myanmar’s second-largest city showed widespread destruction, raising fears that many were trapped under the rubble or killed. The magnitude 7.7 earthquake, with an epicenter near Mandalay in Myanmar, struck at midday and was followed by a strong magnitude 6.4 aftershock. The extent of death, injury and destruction — especially in Myanmar, which is embroiled in a civil war and where information is tightly controlled at the best of times —
Taiwan was ranked the fourth-safest country in the world with a score of 82.9, trailing only Andorra, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar in Numbeo’s Safety Index by Country report. Taiwan’s score improved by 0.1 points compared with last year’s mid-year report, which had Taiwan fourth with a score of 82.8. However, both scores were lower than in last year’s first review, when Taiwan scored 83.3, and are a long way from when Taiwan was named the second-safest country in the world in 2021, scoring 84.8. Taiwan ranked higher than Singapore in ninth with a score of 77.4 and Japan in 10th with
SECURITY RISK: If there is a conflict between China and Taiwan, ‘there would likely be significant consequences to global economic and security interests,’ it said China remains the top military and cyber threat to the US and continues to make progress on capabilities to seize Taiwan, a report by US intelligence agencies said on Tuesday. The report provides an overview of the “collective insights” of top US intelligence agencies about the security threats to the US posed by foreign nations and criminal organizations. In its Annual Threat Assessment, the agencies divided threats facing the US into two broad categories, “nonstate transnational criminals and terrorists” and “major state actors,” with China, Russia, Iran and North Korea named. Of those countries, “China presents the most comprehensive and robust military threat