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Taiwan president urges parliament to pass stalled special defence budget

By Thomson Reuters Feb 10, 2026 | 8:20 PM

TAIPEI, Feb 11 (Reuters) – Taiwan President Lai Ching-te on Wednesday urged the opposition-controlled parliament to pass his $40 billion special defence budget, which has ​been stalled by lawmakers, saying given the rising ‌threat level strengthening the military cannot wait.

Lai last year proposed the defence boost to counter China, which views the island as its own territory. But parliament has instead advanced its ‌own, ​less expensive proposals, which only fund ⁠some U.S. weapons.

The main ⁠opposition party Kuomintang (KMT), whose vice chairman visited Beijing last week, said it supports defence spending but will not sign “blank cheques” and has a right to ​fully scrutinise the legislation, blaming Lai for the impasse.

Speaking to reporters at the presidential office, Lai said ⁠he had never asked lawmakers ⁠to pass the spending unconditionally, reiterating ​that the government was happy to provide detailed explanation on ​its plans.

“I want to emphasise: political parties may ‌compete, and policies may be fully communicated so that the public can choose. But national defence, so closely tied to national security, sovereignty, and our very ⁠survival, should be an area where we unite and present a common front to the outside,” he said.

“Now, as external ⁠threats continue ‌to rise and force-building becomes ever more ⁠urgent, we are once again seeing ​efforts to ‌obstruct the strengthening of national defence.”

Taiwan ​wants peace ⁠but cannot harbour any illusions, he added

“Taiwan’s strengthening of national defence is not to invade any country. We are simply safeguarding the way of life we are accustomed to.”

(Reporting by Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard; Editing ​by Christopher Cushing)