Normally a non-government newspaper must inevitably collapse unless it gets income through adequate advertising and circulation. But the partisan newspaper of Kuomintang Party well survives though it doesn't sell well as it stresses political propagation instead of news reports. The voices of freedom of speech have been significantly rising after the end of World War Ⅱ. In turn, non-government mass media have been mushrooming. The Kuomintang Party has no longer been able to continually monopolize the market. To win a slice of the pie, privatization into corporate management should be a feasible reform. In fact, the Kuomintang Party did try hard to launch enterprising management, and reorganize lots of the partisan media into ordinary corporations, but only superficially. The partisan mass media still received certain sorts of subsidies. The Central News Agency and the Broadcasting Corporation of China represent the two typical examples. Kuomintang Party itself has been in the problem positioning its own news agencies. In the downward publicity cognition, Kuomintang Party has been hesitant to give up its helm. In the face of the cutthroat competition from the private counterparts, the Kuomintang Party operated mass media very naturally have not been the rival. This same problem has been seen in the disputes where the Propagation Ministry of the Central Government would be made under the Executive Yuan (the Cabinet) jurisdiction. In the post World War Ⅱ time, Kuomintang Party has attempted to reform itself into enterprise but has failed to adopt thorough efforts. The efforts have turned out only to complicate the news publication.