Accused of having double standards on Hong Kong residents’ settlement applications and radical pro-China forces in Taiwan During the anti-extradition movement in Hong Kong, the Democratic Progressive Party in Taiwan loudly expressed its support for Hong Kong people in their fight for democracy, which received some applause at the time. However, some key figures of the DPP (such as
Victor Wang, Liang Wenjie and
Lin Ching-yi) later made some unfriendly remarks with misinformation, and some of their policies towards Hong Kong people in Taiwan also attracted some criticism. In April 2025, a scholar published an article in the academic journal International Review on Public and Nonprofit Marketing, criticizing former Interior Minister Hsu Kuo-yung by name for being so strict on immigration and settlement applications from Hong Kong people on the one hand, and so tolerant of radical pro-China forces in Taiwan on the other, which is a contradictory approach. When many Hong Kong democrats have experience working in Hong Kong public universities (e.g.,
Helena Wong,
Claudia Mo,
Fernando Cheung,
Kenneth Chan Ka-lok), the Taiwan government should not regard the experience of working in Hong Kong public universities as a national security risk to Taiwan, just as KMT Chairman
Eric Chu worked at the
National Taiwan University when Tsai Ing-wen was president, but no one would regard such a relationship as Eric Chu supporting Tsai Ing-wen or the DPP. == Notes ==