Chen Chin-te MLY |
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陳金德 | |
![]() Chen in February 2015
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Magistrate of Yilan County (acting) |
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Assumed office 6 November 2017 |
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Preceded by |
Lin Tsung-hsien Wu Tze-cheng (acting) |
Member of the Legislative Yuan | |
In office 1 February 2002 – 31 January 2008 |
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Succeeded by | Lin Chien-jung |
Constituency | Yilan County |
Personal details | |
Born |
Luodong, Yilan, Taiwan |
26 September 1961
Nationality | Taiwanese |
Political party | Democratic Progressive Party |
Alma mater |
National Taiwan University of Science and Technology National Taipei University of Technology |
Occupation | politician |
Chen Chin-te (Chinese: 陳金德; born 26 September 1961), also spelled Chen Chin-de and also known as Derek Chen, is a Taiwanese politician.
Chen attended National Taipei University of Technology and National Taiwan University of Science and Technology. Through his activism, Chen became known as the "oldest grandson of the tangwai movement." He worked as Yu Shyi-kun's secretary when Yu was Yilan County magistrate. Chen ended his graduate studies without earning a doctoral degree, to run in the 1991 National Assembly elections. While a member of the National Assembly, Chen also served as Democratic Progressive Party caucus leader. Within the DPP, Chen was affiliated with the New Tide faction. In 2000, Chen helped pass laws that reduced the power of the legislative body. Most of the assembly's responsibilities were delegated to the Legislative Yuan.
Upon stepping down from the National Assembly, Chen served as leader of Yilan County's Civil Affairs Bureau. He formed an electoral coalition with Chen Tsiao-long, Chiu Kuo-chang, Kang Tai-shan, Liu Yi-te, and Lan Shih-tsung prior to the 2001 Legislative Yuan elections. The group vowed to bring reforms similar to those implemented in the National Assembly to the Legislative Yuan. Out of these six candidates, only the Chens were elected to the Legislative Yuan. Shortly after taking office as a representative of Yilan County, Chen Chin-te became the first DPP official to visit China since Chinese vice premier Qian Qichen explicitly acknowledged the possibility in 2002. Chen began discussing legislative reform upon his return from China. He supported a Legislative Yuan with approximately 140 members, and formed an inter-party alliance to discuss the issue in May 2002, alongside fellow lawmakers Alex Tsai and Lu Hsueh-chang. Chen criticized a vote held on legislative membership reductions in March 2004, as rushed. An amendment cutting the number of seats in the Legislative Yuan was passed later that year.