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Many versions of military procurement bill, Jaw Shaw-Kong advocates balancing all sides by first earmarking 810 billion

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Amid differences over the national defense special budget, Jaw Shaw-Kong proposed a compromise: earmarking NT$810 billion, but initially approving only the NT$350 billion with official US documentation, freezing the rest.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the proposal suggested by former BCC Chairman Jaw Shaw-Kong regarding the military procurement bill?
A: His proposal is to earmark NT$810 billion, which reviews the NT$350 billion that has already received LOAs while temporarily freezing the remaining NT$460 billion.
Q: Why did Legislative Yuan President Han Kuo-Yu request a special report from the Ministry of National Defense on the 20th?
A: He requested it because the cross-party negotiation on the draft of the National Defense Special Ordinance convened on the 15th failed to reach a consensus.
Q: What demands did the Kuomintang's Culture and Communications Committee emphasize in their press release?
A: They emphasized that the party demands transparency, official processes, receipts, a complete project establishment process, and government-to-government channels.
Q: What are the different proposed funding amounts for the military procurement bill by the DPP and the TPP?
A: The Democratic Progressive Party's version is NT$1.25 trillion, while the Taiwan People's Party's version is NT$400 billion.
Q: Who did Jaw Shaw-Kong mention as lobbying or expressing concerns that led to differing versions within the pan-blue camp?
A: He mentioned concerns from bipartisan United States Congress members and lobbying by American Institute in Taiwan Director Raymond Greene.