In 2004, Lin Chong-Pin, former deputy
Minister of Defense of the
Republic of China, said that a
think tank in Beijing or Shanghai gave a proposal for
United Republics of China. None of this proposal has become public. But in the same years the officials and think-tanks of the
People's Republic of China have often shown an interest in the 1964 merger of mainland
Tanganyika and the archipelago of
Zanzibar to form the
United Republic of Tanzania. In 2011, Li Yi-hu, director of Institute of International Politics, University of Peking, said that Tanzania and Zanzibar, the model of "One country, two constitutions", could be referring to "One China, two constitutions". In February 2011,
China Review News published an article about the Tanzanian style of
Chinese unification.
Charter 08 Charter 08, co-written by the formerly incarcerated
human rights activist and
Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo calls for the establishment of a Chinese "Federal Republic". The relevant proposal states:
"A Federated Republic. A democratic China should seek to act as a responsible major power contributing toward peace and development in the Asian Pacific region by approaching others in a spirit of equality and fairness. In Hong Kong and Macau, we should support the freedoms that already exist. With respect to Taiwan, we should declare our commitment to the principles of freedom and democracy and then, negotiating as equals and ready to compromise, seek a formula for peaceful unification. We should approach disputes in the national-minority areas of China with an open mind, seeking ways to find a workable framework within which all ethnic and religious groups can flourish. We should aim ultimately at a federation of democratic communities of China." As of late 2010, Charter 08 has already been signed by more than 10,000 people both inside and outside China. Large economic ties between China and Taiwan have also motivated the occasional informal use of the term to describe a united China. The introduction of
Special Economic Zones since the 1980s have led to the development of several distinct regional economies within the
People's Republic of China, such as the
Pearl River Delta,
Yangtze River Delta, and the
Bohai Rim. Several of these regions have economies the size of small developed nations. Some scholars who use the term United States of China argue that during the process of the
reform and opening up the People's Republic has evolved into a
de facto federal state in which these economic regions have wide discretion to implement policy goals which are set by the PRC central government and in which provinces and localities actively compete with each other in order to advance economically.
Federal Republic of China A
Federal Republic of China is a proposed future
federal republic encompassing
mainland China (and its provinces),
Macau,
Hong Kong, and
Taiwan. This "Third Republic" (following on from the
Republic of China and the
People's Republic of China) is proposed by supporters of the
Tibet independence movement, although it would not in effect create an independent Tibet.
Yan Jiaqi, writing for the
Tibetan government-in-exile, has written that: ''"It would be a federation with the characteristics of a
confederation. Federal China would consist of two kinds of republics: 'loose republics' such as
Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macao,
Tibet,
Inner Mongolia and
Xinjiang: and 'close republics' consisting the rest of China."'' According to Yan:
"They would differ from the existing federal countries in their defence, taxation and legal systems." This model, however, in which the close republics would have an arrangement based on the
United States of America, and the loose republics more on the
European Union, is not agreed upon by all advocates of a Federal Republic. On June 4, 2020, a proposed
New Federal State of China was announced, led by an exiled billionaire,
Guo Wengui (a.k.a. Miles Kwok), and
Steve Bannon.
"United China" or "United States of China" Another concept is that of a
United China or a
United States of China. First devised in the early 1920s by
Chen Jiongming, it was modeled closely after the
United States of America. Given the political, social and linguistic realities of China in the
warlord period, Chen Jiongming believed that a
federalist approach was the only feasible way to eventually establish a united,
democratic republic. Beginning with
Guangdong as a model state, he wanted to organize a "United States of China in the manner of the American experience" through negotiation with federalists from all parts of the country (New York Times June 27, 1922).
"United Republics of China" The concept of a
United Republics of China first appeared in the
"Outline of (the) Post-War New World Map" created by Maurice Gomberg and published in Philadelphia in early 1942. The map shows a proposal to re-arrange the world after an Allied victory against the Axis forces. In the map the United Republics of China (URC) includes most parts of present-day China, Korea, the erstwhile French colony of Indochina (now Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia), Thailand and Malaya. Otherwise, North Manchuria and Mongolia belong to the USSR; Taiwan and Hainan become territories of the United States. ==See also==