I will keep things simple on an historic night in Taiwan and just share some recent tweets (photos in tweets may not appear if viewed through an RSS reader):
Ah, Renegade Province “Election” Day! Time to get up, do some stretches, check the missile codes, make tea...
— The Relevant Organs (@relevantorgans) January 16, 2016
Apple Daily TW: "Tsai Ing-wen: the first female president in the Chinese-speaking world" #TaiwanElection #Taiwan2016 pic.twitter.com/O1KQ6b5EPP
— Kristie Lu Stout CNN (@klustout) January 16, 2016
Breaking: Sina Weibo (western media call it China's Twitter) censors just blocked Taiwan's first female president. pic.twitter.com/2wfggtVQ9Y
— Eddie Du (@Edourdoo) January 16, 2016
It ain't Taiwan without a night market. Even at Tsai's prez announcement. #TaiwanElection pic.twitter.com/vpFZUhW1wH
— Ellis Liang (@EllisLiang) January 16, 2016
Sunflower Movement got far less intl attention than Occupy, but has shaped Taiwan far, far more than HK protests effected situation here.
— James Griffiths (@jgriffiths) January 16, 2016
Banner outside DPP headquarters says step over the corpse of HK and stay away from China #TaiwanElection pic.twitter.com/tdrvosDPq4
— Varsity CUHK (@varsitycuhk) January 16, 2016
Xi Jinping looking a bit outnumbered on @guardian website this weekend pic.twitter.com/MH4gdSGkrN
— Tom Phillips (@tomphillipsin) January 16, 2016
The changing political geography. 2012 on left, 2016 on right pic.twitter.com/SS7Wm8rRDh
— Jonathan Sullivan (@jonlsullivan) January 16, 2016
"China should learn from us". Taiwanese voters elect first female president Tsai Ing-wen https://t.co/2PBJ4hZH8S pic.twitter.com/eDEnIoSEpY
— jonathanwatts (@jonathanwatts) January 16, 2016
Tsai: "Our message to the international community is that democracy as a value is deeply-ingrained in the Taiwanese people."
— Nathan VanderKlippe (@nvanderklippe) January 16, 2016
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