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Party members often assist in unionizing workers and regularly hold protests against the government's labor policies, as well as perceived imperialism from the United States and Japan. Notable labor demonstrations that the Labor Party helped organize include the 2004 Yaowen Electric protests [zh], 2004 Hsinta strike [zh] and 2009 labor dispute against TSMC.
History
The Labor Party was founded on 29 March 1989 by unionized workers of the Far East Synthetic Fiber Company in Xinpu, Hsinchu County.[4] The trade union had been protesting the company's mass layoffs and refusal to increase workers' wages; the protests culminated in the 1989 Far East Synthetic Fiber Company strike [zh] a month later.[4] When establishing the party, the union leadership considered adopting the name "Taiwanese Communist Party" but elected not to do so due to the widespread anti-communism in Taiwan at the time.[2][5]
In the years following its founding, the Labor Party grew in size and influence, with its membership consisting mainly of former political prisoners of the White Terror, labor movement organizers and the working class.[5] The party, however, did not see electoral success until the 2009 local elections, when Labor Party candidate Kao Wei-kai was elected to the Hsinchu County Council.[6] After Kao was elected, a majority of his monthly salary (NT$80,000) was put back into the party's treasury to fund future political activities.
In the 2018 local elections, Kao was reelected to the Hsinchu County Council, alongside Labor Party veteran Luo Mei-wen. The party won a total of two seats in the county council, representing the townships of Hukou and Xinpu.[7]
The Labor Party is a socialist party[2][8] which views itself as the ideological successor to the Taiwanese Communist Party.[9] The party opposes the electoral system in Taiwan, calling it a bourgeois democracy, but participates in elections nonetheless.[8]
The Labor Party opposes Taiwan independence and supports the unification of Taiwan with mainland China.[3][8]