According to the United States State Department, the
Taiwanese constitution provides for
freedom of speech and
press, and the authorities generally respect these rights in practice. An independent press, an effective judiciary, and a functioning democratic political system combine to protect freedom of speech and press.
Reporters Without Borders reported that Taiwan "generally respects the principles of media freedom". The U.S. Department of State stated in a 2012 report, "There are no official restrictions on access to the Internet or credible reports that the authorities monitor
e-mail or Internet
chat rooms without judicial oversight." Since 2016, the date of Cheng's death has been commemorated as Freedom of Speech Day in Taiwan. In 2023, "" (Cheng Tsai-wei), a million-subscriber YouTuber in Taiwan, said that criticising the
Democratic Progressive Party might lead to his facing personal attacks from DPP supporters. He therefore felt unsafe commenting local politics. agreed with Cheap. In 2024, iWIN ordered some websites to remove illustrations
sexually depicting fictional children, which triggered concerns of censorship in Taiwan. The Taiwanese government later issued a statement that only sexual images of children, pornographic drawings depicting real-life subjects, and realistic pornographic drawings generated by AI, are regulated. However, the government backed down after criticisms about censorship. Additionally, platforms like
Taobao Taiwan were officially shut down. After the 2019 Double 11 shopping festival, the Taobao Taiwan app saw its download numbers exceed 2 million. In December 2022, the
Ministry of Digital Affairs declared that the mobile app
Douyin and
TikTok posed a threat to national cybersecurity. As a result, both the central government and local governments prohibited the downloading, installation, and use of Douyin or TikTok apps on government-issued smartphones, tablets, and computers. In February 2025,
Ministry of Digital Affairs announced it would block
DeepSeek in government, citing security concerns. In December 2025,
Xiaohongshu was blocked by the
Ministry of the Interior for one year citing concerns involving information security and fraud prevention; the
Criminal Investigation Bureau claimed the app poses risks to users' personal data and was involved in 1,706 fraud cases since 2024.
Political parties During the martial law period, the Civil Associations Act (人民團體法) forbade people from establishing political parties that promote
separatism and
communism. The law was abolished in 2011. In 2008, the
Taiwan Communist Party became the 141st registered political party in Taiwan. Under
Additional Articles of the Constitution of the Republic of China (中華民國憲法增修條文), the
Judicial Yuan has the right to order "unconstitutional political parties" to dissolve if it endangers "the existence of the Republic of China or the nation's free and democratic constitutional order". Currently, the Constitutional Court takes the responsibility for that. On 6 November 2024, the Ministry of the Interior filed a lawsuit seeking to ban the
Chinese Unification Promotion Party for "posing a threat to democracy."
Local media The authority for censorship in Taiwan since 2006 is the
National Communications Commission (NCC). On 26 June 2006, news reports said that a review by the
Council of Grand Justices of the ROC found that part of the National Communications Commission Organization Act (e.g. Article 4) is unconstitutional, and that after 31 December 2008 the law provision is invalid. In 2016, when the Taiwanese government proposed amendments to the Copyright Act that sparked concerns about online freedom of speech and expression. The proposed changes aimed to combat online piracy but were criticised for potentially infringing on individuals’ rights to freedom of speech. On December 12, 2020,
CTi News was forced to cease broadcasting after the NCC decided not to renew its license, marking one of the rare instances of a television news station being taken off the air in Taiwan since the establishment of the NCC in 2006. CTi Television filed a lawsuit regarding this decision, and on 10 May 2023, the Taipei High Administrative Court ruled in favour of CTi Television in the first-instance verdict, annulled the NCC's decision not to renew the station's licence and remanded the case for further review.
Reporters Without Borders issued a statement, saying the refusal did not go against press freedom. In November 2024, under government pressure,
Public Television Service modified a news report regarding
Donald Trump's election as President of the United States. The alteration followed a
TaiwanPlus journalist Louise Watt's reference to Trump as a "convicted felon". Reporters Without Borders considered this as a factually accurate description, given his May 2024 criminal conviction by a US court for falsifying business records. Reporters Without Borders called on the Taiwanese government to commit to refraining from similar interference in news coverage in the future.
Academia On 5 January 2018, the
National Taiwan University elected its 11th president,
Kuan Chung-ming, who won with the highest number of votes. The Ministry of Education under the DPP refused to issue the appointment letter, citing procedural issues, which led to criticism from the academia. After two education ministers, namely
Pan Wen-chung and
Wu Maw-kuen, had stepped down due to this refusal, on 24 December 2018, Minister of Education
Yeh Jiunn-rong stated that he grudgingly agreed to appoint Kuan Chung-ming as NTU's president, with the appointment to take effect on 8 January 2019. Yeh faced accusations of handling the matter hastily, and subsequently resigned in response. During a lecture on 10 April 2020, Chao Ming-wei, an associate professor at
Chung Yuan Christian University, referred to
COVID-19 as "Wuhan pneumonia," which prompted a mainland Chinese student to file a complaint accusing him of discrimination. In response, Chao apologised during the lecture, emphasising that, "as a professor of the
Republic of China," he did not engage in discriminatory behaviour. On 14 April, he was called to a meeting with the university’s dean and associate dean of academic affairs, who criticised his apology for inappropriately highlighting his identity as a "professor of the Republic of China." They warned that failure to amend his remarks could result in the case being referred to the university's ethics committee. Under these circumstances, Chao felt compelled to issue a second apology. == Relationship with China ==