Cheng Feng-shih

Taiwanese politician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroTaiwanese politician
PlacesTaiwan
isPolitician
Work fieldPolitics
Gender
Male
Birth27 December 1941, Shuangxi District, New Taipei, Taiwan
Age83 years
Star signCapricorn
Politics:Kuomintang
Education
National Chengchi UniversityWenshan District, Taipei, Taiwan
Tunghai UniversityTaichung, Taiwan
Positions Held
member of the National Assembly of the Republic of China
Member of the Legislative Yuan(1 February 1999—31 January 2005)
The details

Biography

Cheng Feng-shih (Chinese: 鄭逢時; pinyin: Zhèng Féngshí; born 27 December 1941) is a Taiwanese politician.

Education

Cheng studied public relations at National Chengchi University, and later earned a master's degree in the subject at Tunghai University.

Career

Cheng was elected to the Taipei County Council in 1968. He was subsequently elected to the National Assembly in 1972 and 1975. During his tenure as an assemblyman, Cheng chaired the presidium of the National Assembly. Between 1981 and 1993, Cheng sat on the Taiwan Provincial Council. Cheng was elected to his first term on the Legislative Yuan in 1995 with 3.28% of the vote, representing the multimember Taipei County district. He was subsequently placed on the Kuomintang party list and reelected twice via proportional representation. Until August 2000, Cheng was chairman of Taiwan Television, when he was succeeded by Lai Kuo-chou.

As a legislator, Cheng was also a member of the board of Kuang Wu Institute of Technology. While a member of the Legislative Yuan, Cheng led the Kuomintang legislative caucus, within the Kuomintang's Central Standing Committee, and was deputy director of the party's policy committee. He retained the policy committee position for some time after stepping down as a legislator.

During his third term on the Legislative Yuan, Cheng commented on Lee Teng-hui's past affiliation with the Chinese Communist Party, operations of the Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission, and the exchange of political donations and favors, among them the December 2002 election of Chu An-hsiung [zh] as speaker of the Kaohsiung City Council, which was linked with black gold politics.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 14 Aug 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.