Constituency Taipei 2 Constituency Taipei County 3 Constituency New Taipei 12 Party Kuomintang | Succeeded by Yu Tian Succeeded by Huang Kuo-chang Parents Lee Huan | |
Born 3 December 1948 (age 68)
Hangzhou, Republic of China ( 1948-12-03 ) Political party Kuomintang (until 1993; since 2005) Education New York University, National Chengchi University Similar Huang Kuo‑chang, Lee Huan, Sun Yat‑sen, Liao Chongzhen |
Lee ching hua withdraws proposed fourth nuclear power plant referendum
Lee Ching-hua (Chinese: 李慶華; born 3 December 1948) is a Taiwanese politician.
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Family and education
Lee Ching-hua was born on 3 December 1948, the second child to Lee Huan and Pan Hsiang-ning. He had one older brother, Lee Ching-chung, and two younger sisters, Lee Ching-chu and Diane Lee. Lee Ching-hua earned a bachelor's degree in law from National Chengchi University before furthering his education in the United States, where he obtained a doctorate in history from New York University. Lee then returned to Taiwan and became an associate professor at NCCU.
Political career
Lee was elected to the Legislative Yuan for the first time in 1992. He, Chen Kuei-miao, and others broke away from the Kuomintang to found the New Party the next year. He joined James Soong's People First Party in 2000 to support Soong's first presidential bid, but continued serving as the leader of the New Party's national election and development committee during the 2000 election. Lee left the PFP in May 2005 and rejoined the Kuomintang. Lee lost his legislative seat to Huang Kuo-chang of the New Power Party in 2016. The next year, Wu Den-yih named Lee a spokesman for Wu's KMT chairmanship bid.