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Legislative Yuan constituencies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Legislative Yuan is the unicameral legislature of the Republic of China (Taiwan), currently with 113 seats, down from the previous 225 in 1998.

73 are directly elected in local single-member districts by the citizens residing in the free area of the Republic of China.[1] 6 seats are elected by indigenous peoples voters in two three-member constituencies. 34 are elected on nationwide party-list.

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Map

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List of single-member constituencies

More information Constituency, Area ...
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Historical constituencies

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1948

Prior to the Kuomintang's defeat in Mainland China to the Chinese Communist Party in 1949, there were 759 seats in the Legislative Yuan.

Provinces

Directly-controlled municipalities

Outer Mongolia

Tibet

  • Tibet (Xizang): 5 (3) seats
  • Overseas Tibetans: 5 seats
  • Provincial Tibetans: 5 seats

Ethnic minority representatives

  • Minorities in frontier regions: 6 seats
  • Overseas diaspora: 19 (8) seats

Sectoral representatives

  • Accounting: 1 seat
  • Agriculture: 18 seats
  • Business: 10 seats
  • Education: 10 seats
  • Engineering: 2 seats
  • Fishery: 3 seats
  • Healthcare: 4 seats
  • Industrial and Mining: 10 seats
  • Journalism: 5 seats
  • Legal: 3 seats
  • Post-secondary Education: 5 seats
  • Workers: 18 seats

1992

Starting from the 1992 legislative election, the second Legislative Yuan had 161 members elected from the Taiwan Area of the Republic of China, 119 from 27 multi-member constituencies, 6 from indigenous constituencies, 6 from overseas constituencies and 30 elected on nationwide party-list.

1995

In 1995, the number of seats from the multi-member constituencies was increased to 122.

1998

In 1998, the number of seats was further increased to 225, 168 from 29 multi-member constituencies, 8 from indigenous constituencies, 8 from overseas constituencies and 41 elected on nationwide party-list.

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See also

Notes

  1. 2020 election; based on area rather than constituency name
  2. New Taipei City was Taipei County prior to 2010 and its constituencies were named accordingly.
  3. Taoyuan City was Taoyuan County prior to 2014 and its constituencies were named accordingly.
  4. Also included two villages of Dali prior to 2019
  5. Formerly Taichung City Constituency 1 prior to 2010
  6. Formerly Taichung City Constituency 2 prior to 2010
  7. Formerly Taichung City Constituency 3 prior to 2010
  8. Formerly Taichung County Constituency 4 prior to 2010
  9. Two districts in Taichung Constituency 2 prior to 2019
  10. Formerly Taichung County Constituency 5 prior to 2010
  11. Formerly Kaohsiung County Constituency 1 prior to 2010
  12. Formerly Kaohsiung County Constituency 2 prior to 2010
  13. Formerly Kaohsiung City Constituency 1 prior to 2010
  14. Formerly Kaohsiung County Constituency 3 prior to 2010
  15. Formerly Kaohsiung City Constituency 8 2010–2019 and Kaohsiung County Constituency 4 prior to 2010
  16. Elected member Su Chen-ching is a member of DPP but ran as an independent
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References

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