Addressing journalists in Taipei, Ma Ying-jeou acknowledged that at least one of the subjects currently under discussion between Taipei and Beijing, opening representative offices on each other's territory, did have a political component, but said he was in no rush to confront the serious political issues dividing the sides.
"We have a principle of discussing easy matters before harder ones and economic issues before political ones," he said.
Last month on the sidelines of a regional economic summit in Indonesia, Xi indicated to Taiwanese representatives that he was losing patience with Taiwan's go-slow approach on political dialogue.
"The issue of the political divide that exists between the two sides must step by step reach a final resolution and it cannot be passed on from generation to generation," the official Xinhua news agency quoted Xi as saying.
That stance is extremely unpopular on Taiwan, where the great majority of the island's 23 million people have no interest in uniting with the mainland, seeing it as the death knell for their hard-won democratic freedoms.
Ma appeared to acknowledge that in his remarks today, saying he was not considering holding a referendum on a peace treaty with Beijing something he himself says would be necessary before such a treaty could be considered.
The peace treaty is favored by China, because it sees its implementation as putting Taiwan on an inevitable trajectory toward unity, the ultimate goal of its Taiwan policy for the past six decades.
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