Pan-Green Coalition

[3][4][5] The name comes from the colours of the Democratic Progressive Party, which originally adopted green in part because of its association with the anti-nuclear movement.This strategy is helped by the fact that much of the motivation that voters have for voting for one party or the other are for reasons that have nothing to do with relations with China.For much of the 1990s, the parties which later formed the Pan-Green Coalition greatly benefited because they were less corrupt than the ruling Kuomintang (KMT).However, due to the controversies and the alleged corruption cases involving the former DPP nominated President Chen Shui-bian, the public perception of the Coalition is seemed to have been altered somewhat.The Pan-Green Coalition formed in the aftermath of the 2000 presidential election, after which Lee Teng-hui was expelled from the Kuomintang and created his own party, the Taiwan Solidarity Union, which maintains a pro-independence platform.
Green Party TaiwanLai Ching-teIdeologyProgressivismTaiwaneseTaiwanese nationalismAnti-communismAnti-imperialismROC independenceTaiwan independenceSocial democracySocial liberalismGreen politicsPolitical positionCentre-leftLegislative YuanPolitics of TaiwanPolitical partiesElectionsleft-wingDemocratic Progressive PartycentristTraditional ChineseSimplified ChineseStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinBopomofoGwoyeu RomatzyhWade–GilesTongyong PinyinSouthern MinHokkienTaiwan independencemovementDe-SinicizationSelf-determinationFormosaTaiwanizationFormosanTaiwanese cultureRepublic of China independenceFour-Stage TheoryFour Wants and One WithoutOne Country on Each SideRepublic of China on TaiwanSpecial state-to-state relationsTaiwan consensusTaiwan ValueTheory of the Undetermined Status of TaiwanTwo ChinasResolution on Taiwan's FutureTreaty of ShimonosekiTreaty of San FranciscoKingdom of MiddagKingdom of TungningRepublic of FormosaTaiwan under Japanese rule2008 Taiwanese United Nations membership referendumAdditional Articles of the ConstitutionAnti-Black Box Curriculum MovementFebruary 28 IncidentFormosa IncidentPetition Movement for the Establishment of a Taiwanese ParliamentPresidential elections in TaiwanQiandao Lake IncidentSunflower Student MovementTaiwan Passport StickerTaiyuan IncidentThird Taiwan Strait CrisisTiananmen Square protests of 1989White TerrorWild Lily student movementZhongli incidentReferendum ActSocial Democratic PartyTaiwan Statebuilding PartyTaiwan Solidarity UnionInternational Socialist ForwardNew Power PartyTaiwanese Localism FrontFree Taiwan PartyTaiwan Action Party AllianceTaiwan Constitution AssociationTaiwan Defense AllianceTaiwan Independence PartyTaiwan Nationalist PartyTaiwan Renewal PartyTaiwan Revolutionary PartyTangwai movementJapanese ruleTaiwanese Communist PartyTaiwanese People's PartyFormosa AllianceFormosan League for ReemancipationLiberty TimesTaiwanese Cultural AssociationWorld United Formosans for IndependenceChen (Chih-hsiung)Chen (Lung-chu)Chen (Shui-bian)Chiang (Wei-shui)Lee (Chen-Yuan)Lee (Teng-hui)Lee (Ying-yuan)Liao (Thomas)Su (Beng)228 Hand-in-Hand rallyBenshengrenChinese imperialismConservatism in TaiwanFormosa MagazineLiberalism in ChinaMutual Defense TreatyNew Tide factionOpinion polling on Taiwanese identityPolitical status of TaiwanProposed flags of TaiwanPro-Taiwanese sentimentSecession in ChinaTaiwan Relations ActTaiwan the FormosaTaiwan's 400 Year HistoryTaiwanese indigenous peoplespolitical coalitionTaiwanPan-Blue CoalitionChinese unificationKuomintangChen Shui-bian2000 presidential electionLee Teng-huiTsai Ing-wenTaiwanese independenceRadicalismChen Yi-chiEconomic nationalismRight-wing populismChinese nationalismLiu Yi-teConstitutionalismSanlih E-TelevisionFormosa TelevisionPan-Purple CoalitionYouTubePolitical parties of TaiwanTaiwan People's PartyNon-Partisan Solidarity UnionPeople First PartyLabor PartyNew PartyZheng Shen Min PartyList of political parties in TaiwanPolitics of the Republic of ChinaList of political parties