After yesterday's chaos in the Legislative Yuan, demonstrators gathered outside the building last night chanting "No discussion, no democracy".
The Ministry of Economic Affairs stressed today that the government's goal of building a nuclear-free homeland remains unchanged.
Premier Chen Jian-ren chaired his last Executive Yuan meeting this morning and passed the cabinet's collective resignation.
The Ministry of Labor is set to hold a meeting with representatives of delivery industry unions and two major food delivery platforms in Taiwan at the end of the month.
The Ministry of Justice says it has not received any instructions from the presidential office or the Executive Yuan regarding former President Chen Shui-bian's pardon.
The Ministry of National Defense has explained that Taiwan's naval drills last month were routine exercises based on the Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea.
Statistics show that the average real regular wages in Taiwan's industrial and service sectors fell for a third consecutive year in the first quarter of 2024.
Two more national universities are poised to shorten their semesters to 16 weeks per semester from the current 18 weeks.
The cabinet has approved an anti-fraud package mandating that multi-national digital platforms offering advertising services must assist in identifying, reporting, and removing fraudulent content or risk hefty fines and even service suspensions.