Abstract

ABSTRACTCampaigning to become Taiwan’s first female president, the Democratic Progressive Party’s (DPP) Tsai Ing-wen lost the 2012 election by a small margin to the Kuomintang (KMT) Chinese Nationalist Party’s) Ma Ying-jeou, who garnered substantial women’s support in the 2008 election. The feminist gap, rather than the gender gap, has a critical impact independent of party identification and candidate evaluation in explaining the close result in the 2012 election and the vote changes in the two presidential elections.

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