Other Chinese Weibo accounts that follow Taiwan have been similarly despondent.
State-run Shenzhen Television wrote that the breakdown in talks signalled “a chaotic battle” to come in the election.
One Chinese Weibo user wrote simply: “I saw news that the talks broke down, and now I’ve lost hope.”
The DPP has defied Chinese pressure. Beijing views DPP presidential candidate Lai Ching-te as a separatist and has rebuffed repeated offers of talks from both him and Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen.
Speaking at a campaign rally on Sunday night in Taipei’s sister city New Taipei, Lai said that if Taiwan accepts it is part of China – Beijing’s bottom line for talks – it will lose sovereignty.
“With no sovereignty, you will have no ownership over your land, your homes,” Lai said.
Hou Yu-ih, the candidate for Taiwan’s largest opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT), told his supporters that a vote for Lai was a vote for war and only he could bring peace. Lai and the DPP strongly dispute that point of view.
On Monday, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office repeated its attacks on Lai and running mate Hsiao Bi-khim, formerly Taiwan’s de facto ambassador to the United States.
Lai and Hsiao “distorted facts and downplayed the harmfulness and danger of ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist activities to deceive voters in the 2024 leadership election in Taiwan”, it said.
Opinion polls since the opposition talks collapsed have given a mixed picture.
The Taiwanese Public Opinion Foundation said that just more than half of respondents to the question of who they regarded as having the “best prospects” of winning answered Lai.
Television station ETtoday put Lai at about 35 per cent, with Hou nipping at his heels with 33 per cent and former Taipei mayor Ko Wen-je from the small Taiwan People’s Party at 21 per cent.
A split opposition gives Lai an increased chance of victory in Taiwan’s first-past-the-post system. In 2020’s election, the DPP won in a landslide, taking 56 per cent of the vote, but only had to face one main opponent, the KMT’s Han Kuo-yu.