<P> The KMT, the largest Pan-Blue party, supports the status quo for the indefinite future with a stated ultimate goal of unification . However, it does not support unification in the short term with the PRC as such a prospect would be unacceptable to most of its members and the public . Ma Ying - jeou, chairman of the KMT and former president of the ROC, has set out democracy, economic development to a level near that of Taiwan, and equitable wealth distribution as the conditions that the PRC must fulfill for reunification to occur . </P> <P> The Democratic Progressive Party, the largest Pan-Green party, officially seeks independence, but in practice also supports the status quo because its members and the public would not accept the risk of provoking the PRC . </P> <P> On 2 September 2008, Mexican newspaper El Sol de México asked President Ma about his views on the subject of "two Chinas" and if there was a solution for the sovereignty issues between the two . The president replied that the relations are neither between two Chinas nor two states . It is a special relationship . Further, he stated that the sovereignty issues between the two cannot be resolved at present, but he quoted the "1992 Consensus", currently accepted by both the Kuomintang and the Communist Party of China, as a temporary measure until a solution becomes available . </P> <P> The relationship with the PRC and the related issues of Taiwanese independence and Chinese reunification continue to dominate politics . </P>

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