Hsu Chen-wei

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

DeputyYen Hsin-chang
Preceded byTsai Pi-chung (acting)
Succeeded byHui-Chen Tung
Hsu Chen-wei
徐榛蔚
Official portrait, 2018
13th Magistrate of Hualien
Assumed office
25 December 2018
DeputyYen Hsin-chang
Preceded byTsai Pi-chung (acting)
Member of the Legislative Yuan
In office
1 February 2016  24 December 2018
Succeeded byHui-Chen Tung
ConstituencyProportional Representation
KMT Party-list №10
MagistrateFu Kun-chi
Deputy Magistrate of Hualien
In office
20 December 2009  22 December 2009
MagistrateFu Kun-chi
Personal details
Born (1968-10-12) 12 October 1968 (age 57)
PartyKuomintang
Other political
affiliations
People First Party (2000–2007)
Independent (2007–2015)
Spouse
(div. 2009)
Fu Kun-chi
(m. 2016)
EducationChinese Culture University (BA)

Hsu Chen-wei (Chinese: 徐榛蔚; pinyin: Xú Zhēnwèi; Wade–Giles: Hsü2 Chên1-wei4;[1] born 12 October 1968) is a Taiwanese politician who currently serves as magistrate of Hualien County since 25 December 2018.[2] She was re-elected in 2022, with 64.7% of the vote, defeating Kolas Yotaka.[3]

On 20 December 2009, Hsu was appointed as the deputy county magistrate by her former husband Fu Kun-chi.[4] They had just divorced 2 days earlier on 18 December.[4] Two days later, Hsu's appointment was withdrawn by the Ministry of the Interior on 22 December 2009 as the ministry deemed the divorce as a political fake marriage and the appointment was a conflict of interest with appointing a close relation to a government office.[5] In March 2010, Fu was fined NT$1 million by the Control Yuan for conflict of interest.[6]

In 2011, Hualien District Court found both of them guilty of having a false divorce to circumvent Public Officials Conflict of Interest Prevention Act (Chinese: 公職人員利益衝突迴避法) which bans the appointment of family members to political posts.[4] Fu and Hsu were both sentenced to six and four months of jail respectively.[4] Both opted to pay fines to avoid jail as the law allowed conversion of jail time to fines in certain circumstances.[7]

Although Hsu's appointment as was withdrawn, she served in other positions during Fu's tenure as magistrate. Hsu was appointed the chairperson of Hualien China Youth Corps (Chinese: 救國團花蓮團) during Fu's first term as magistrate. She was then later appointed the captain of Hualien's Community Patrol (Chinese: 花蓮縣巡守) and subsequently the head of National Women's League (Chinese: 婦女後援會).[8]

On 29 November 2014, Hsu participated in the Hualien County magistrate election as an independent candidate.[9][10] Accordingly to the Taipei Times, her participation was deemed as a backup in the event her former husband Fu, who was also running as an independent candidate, was indicted for stock manipulation before the election.[9][10] Hsu lost the election, placing fourth, to former husband Fu.[7]

2014 Hualien County Magistrate Election
No. Candidate Party Votes Percentage
1Fu Kun-chiIndependent89,048 56.53%
2Hsu Chen-weiIndependent5,436 3.45%
3Huang Shih-peng (黄師鵬)Independent2,369 1.50%
4Ke Tsi-hai (柯賜海)Independent14,954 9.49%
5Chu Kuo-hua (朱國華)Independent2,218 1.41%
6Tsai Chi-ta (蔡啟塔)KMT43,504 27.62%

In 2016, she was elected as the member of the Legislative Yuan for the Kuomintang party-list in the proportional representation constituency until her inauguration as Hualien magistrate in 2018.

In 2018, Hsu was chosen by Kuomintang (KMT) to run for the 2018 Taiwanese local elections.[11] She won the elections with 71.52% of the votes.[12]

2018 Kuomintang Hualien County magistrate primary results
Candidates Place Result
Hsu Chen-wei Called In Walkover
2018 Hualien County Magistrate Election[12]
No. Candidate Party Votes Percentage
1Hsu Chen-wei Kuomintang121,297 71.52%
2Liuh Siao-Mei (劉曉玫)Democratic Progressive Party43,879 25.87%
3Huang Shih-peng (黃師鵬) Independent4,420 2.61%
Total voters 268,817
Valid votes 169,596
Invalid votes 
Voter turnout 63.09%

Personal life

Hsu and Fu divorced in 2009.[4] They remarried in 2016.[13]

Notes

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI