Liu Chun-hsiung

Liu Chun-hsiung (Chinese: 劉俊雄; born 1951) is a Taiwanese politician.

Early life and education

Liu was born in 1951.[1] He studied business at National Sun Yat-sen University.[2][3]

Political career

Liu was director of the Kaohsiung branch of the Democratic Progressive Party, and served on the DPP central committee.[2][3] He was elected to two terms on the Legislative Yuan via the party list, serving from 1999 to 2005.[2][3] In December 2000, Liu and fellow legislator Hsu Chih-ming jointly hosted a press conference, calling for an incinerator operated by Sunny Friend Environmental Technology Company in Meinong District to be shut down.[4] In February 2002, both legislators objected to the selection of You Ching, a fellow Democratic Progressive Party member, as a convenor of the legislature's judiciary committee.[5] During a legislative interpellation session in 2003, regarding legal matters relating to the 2002 election for the Kaohsiung City Council speakership, Liu and Su Ying-kuei argued after Su implied that Liu should be investigated as a suspect in the case.[6] After stepping down from the Legislative Yuan, Liu mounted an unsuccessful campaign for a seat on the Kaohsiung City Council in December 2006.[1][7][8][9]

gollark: The counterargument is that nonworker management might be good in terms of profit maximization but bad in other ways.
gollark: It could be argued that workers could just make their own company if they think they'd run it better.
gollark: i.e. are you required to provide people food and whatever, or just not steal it from them etc.
gollark: The difference is probably positive vs negative rights.
gollark: Anarchocapitalistic people would probably agree with that too.

References

  1. "95年直轄市議員選舉(區域) 候選人得票數" (in Chinese). Central Election Commission. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  2. "Liu Chun-hsiung (4)". Legislative Yuan. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  3. "Liu Chun-hsiung (5)". Legislative Yuan. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  4. Chiu, Yu-Tzu (23 December 2000). "Legislators join incinerator fray". Taipei Times. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  5. Low, Stephanie (28 February 2002). "Pan-blue camp gets 19 convenerships, Pan-green gets 17". Taipei Times. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  6. Chuang, Jimmy (17 April 2003). "Chen Ding-nan admonishes legislators". Taipei Times. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  7. "2006-95年直轄市議員選舉 > 區域" (in Chinese). Central Election Commission. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  8. "95年直轄市議員選舉(區域) 候選人得票數" (in Chinese). Central Election Commission. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  9. "95年直轄市議員選舉(區域) 候選人得票數" (in Chinese). Central Election Commission. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
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