China-sceptic Tsai is facing questions over how she will handle cross-strait relations which are already growing rapidly frosty as she prepares to take the helm after an eight-year rapprochement under her Beijing-friendly predecessor Ma Ying-jeou.
Although a fully fledged democracy, self-ruling Taiwan has never formally declared independence and China still sees it as part of its territory.
Tsai's Democratic Progressive Party is traditionally pro- independence and was voted in by a landslide after voters turned their backs on Ma's Beijing-centred approach for fear the island's sovereignty was being eroded.
"We respect Taiwan's democratic freedom, but we can't accept a lack of unity, lack of peace," said Lu Yueh-hsiang of the pro-Beijing China Production Party.
Outgoing president Ma accepted a tacit agreement - known as the "1992 consensus" - between his Kuomintang party and Beijing which acknowledges there is only "one China".
That paved the way for a slew of trade deals and a tourist boom as mainland visitors flocked to the island.
"If you accept the '92 consensus, everything can be open for discussion," Chang told AFP.
"Only the '92 consensus can give Taiwan's economy a way forward."
Chang was imprisoned for 10 years in the United States for drug trafficking and then lived in exile for 17 years in China before returning to Taiwan in 2013.
He and his followers have often clashed with China- sceptic protesters, including at the 2014 occupation of parliament by students opposing a controversial trade pact with China.
Cross-strait relations have already cooled since Tsai's election victory in January, despite her pledge to maintain the "status quo" with Beijing.
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