Chiu Ching-chun

Chiu Ching-chun (Chinese: 邱鏡淳; pinyin: Qiū Jìngchún; born 8 December 1949) is a Taiwanese politician. He was the Magistrate of Hsinchu County since 20 December 2009 until 25 December 2018.[1]

Chiu Ching-chun
邱鏡淳
Magistrate of Hsinchu County
In office
20 December 2009  25 December 2018
DeputyYang Wen-ke
Preceded byCheng Yung-chin
Succeeded byYang Wen-ke
Member of the Legislative Yuan
In office
1 February 1999  20 December 2009
Succeeded byPerng Shaw-jiin
ConstituencyHsinchu County
Personal details
Born (1949-12-08) 8 December 1949
Emei, Hsinchu County, Taiwan
Nationality Taiwan (Republic of China)
Political partyKuomintang
Alma materMinghsin University of Science and Technology
University of St. Thomas

Education

Chiu obtained his bachelor's degree from Minghsin University of Science and Technology and master's degree in business administration from University of St. Thomas in the United States.[2]

Hsinchu County magistracy

2009 county magistracy election

Chiu assumed the magistracy of Hsinchu County on 20 December 2009 after winning the 2009 magisterial election as the Kuomintang candidate on 5 December 2009.

2014 county magistracy election

In 2014, Chiu ran for reelection. He faced independent candidate Cheng Yung-chin, who had served as magistrate from 2001 to 2009. Chiu won the election.[3][4]

2014 Hsinchu County Magistrate Election Result
No. Candidate Party Votes Percentage
1Yeh Fang-tung (葉芳棟)Independent15,699 5.93%
2Chiu Ching-chun KMT124,309 46.94%
3Cheng Yung-chinIndependent 118,698 44.82%
4Chuang Tso-bin (莊作兵)Independent6,115 2.31%

2016 Mainland China visit

In September 2016, Chiu with another seven magistrates and mayors from Taiwan visited Beijing, which were Hsu Yao-chang (Magistrate of Miaoli County), Liu Cheng-ying (Magistrate of Lienchiang County), Yeh Hui-ching (Deputy Mayor of New Taipei City), Chen Chin-hu (Deputy Magistrate of Taitung County), Lin Ming-chen (Magistrate of Nantou County), Fu Kun-chi (Magistrate of Hualien County) and Wu Cherng-dean (Deputy Magistrate of Kinmen County). Their visit was aimed to reset and restart cross-strait relations after President Tsai Ing-wen took office on 20 May 2016. The eight local leaders reiterated their support of One-China policy under the 1992 consensus. They met with Taiwan Affairs Office Head Zhang Zhijun and Chairperson of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference Yu Zhengsheng.[5][6][7]

gollark: It makes it very easy to be unsafe, which I think should really be avoided, and yet people keep using it for stuff which really needs to not be unsafe.
gollark: No. Go away.
gollark: But my issue is that it makes it very easy to be unsafe.
gollark: You could say that.
gollark: But they don't.

References


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