Okay, I think the two persons named below are the two Independents (無黨籍).
(1) 高金素梅 無黨籍
Kao Chin Su-mei (born September 21, 1965), also known as Chin Su-mei, May Chin and Ciwas Ali, is a Taiwanese politician and retired actress and singer. She is of Manchu and Atayal descent, Ciwas Ali being her Atayal name.
In the 1980s and 1990s, she starred in many popular TV series and films including Ang Lee's The Wedding Banquet (1993). She also released several Mandopop albums. She retired from showbiz in 1999 following her diagnosis of liver cancer which she recovered from.
Chin was electe...
But the legislator named above, according to Wikipedia, is a member of the Nonpartisan Solidarity Union, which Wikipedia classifies as a political party:
The Non-Partisan Solidarity Union[I] is a political party in Taiwan. It was established on 16 June 2004, led by founding Chairwoman Chang Po-ya and emerged a major player in the national political scene during the 2004 Legislative Yuan election, with 26 candidates running for local constituency and aboriginal seats, and 6 others nominated for proportional representation seats.
At its founding, it was something of a big tent party in that it lacked a central ideology and fielded various candidat...
(2) 陳超明 無黨籍
Chen was elected to the Legislative Yuan as an independent in 1998 and served until 2002. He joined the Democratic Progressive Party for the 2004 election cycle, but did not win. In 2011, Chen was named Kuomintang candidate for Miaoli County, and won. He retained his seat in the 2016 elections, defeating former legislators Tu Wen-ching and Kang Shih-ju. In his 2020 legislative campaign, Chen again received support from the Kuomintang.
Chen's Kuomintang membership was suspended in August 2020, af...
I’m kind of confused about the legislator named immediately above, because of this, from the above-cited Wikipedia article:
Chen’s Kuomintang membership was suspended in August 2020, after he was detained and questioned regarding a legal case involving allegations of bribery.[8] [9] The Taipei District Court ruled in July 2022 that Chen had violated the Anti-Corruption Act, sentenced him to seven years and eight months imprisonment, and seized NT$1 million from him.[10] [11]
So there’s one non-partisan who belongs to the non-partisan party, and one non-partisan who was apparently involuntarily relieved of his partisan status, and had some fair-sized legal problems to boot, but somehow got re-elected.
Or maybe I’ve overlooked something.