of Premier in
Daan District, Taipei. The
Constitution of the Republic of China did not originally define strictly the relation between the premier and the president of the Republic and it was not clear whether the government would lean towards a
presidential system or
parliamentary system when divided. Power shifted to Premier
Chiang Ching-kuo after President
Chiang Kai-shek's death but shifted to the presidency again when Chiang Ching-kuo became president. After President
Lee Teng-hui succeeded Chiang as president in 1988, the power struggle within the Kuomintang extended to the constitutional debate over the relationship between the president and the premier. The first three premiers under Lee,
Yu Kuo-hwa,
Lee Huan and
Hau Pei-tsun, were
mainlanders who had initially opposed Lee's ascension to power. The appointment of Lee and Hau were compromises by President Lee to placate the conservative mainlander faction in the party. The subsequent appointment of premier
Lien Chan was taken as a sign of Lee's consolidation of power. Moreover, during this time, the power of the premier to approve the president's appointments and the power of the Legislative Council to confirm the president's choice of premier was removed (out of fears that the
Democratic Progressive Party would one day gain control of the legislature), clearly establishing the president as the more powerful position of the two. The relationship between the premier and the legislature again became a contentious issue after the
2000 Presidential election, which led to the election of the Democratic Progressive Party's
Chen Shui-bian to the presidency, while the legislature remained under a Kuomintang-led-Pan-Blue majority. Initially, President Chen Shui-bian appointed
Tang Fei, a member of the Kuomintang, to the premiership; however, this arrangement proved unworkable, and Chen's subsequent appointments were from the
Democratic Progressive Party, leading minority governments. However, the
Pan-Blue Coalition of the Kuomintang and its coalition partners contended that Chen's actions were unconstitutional, and proposed to name its own choice of premier. When Chen's successor
Ma Ying-jeou and his KMT party lost a majority in the legislature, Ma had offered for the DPP to nominate a premier, though the DPP refused to do so; thus presidents subsequently appointed premiers largely from their own parties and the established constitutional convention is that the premier is responsible to the president and does not have any responsibility to the legislature other than to report on his activities. There are calls for a constitutional amendment to better define the relationship between the executive and legislative branches of government. ==See also==