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Luo Shu-lei

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Luo Shu-lei
Member of the Legislative Yuan
In office
February 1, 2012 – January 31, 2016
Preceded byChiang Hsiao-yen
Succeeded byChiang Wan-an
ConstituencyTaipei City Constituency III(8th session)
Majority118,503 (56.07%)
In office
November 26, 2007 – January 31, 2012
Preceded byChristina Liu
Personal details
Born (1952-11-28) November 28, 1952 (age 71)
Datong District, Taipei, Taiwan
Political partyKuomintang(PFP)
(2008-)
Other political
affiliations
PFP(2002-)
Alma materSoochow University
Macau University of Science and Technology
Occupation
  • Politician
  • Accountant

Luo Shu-lei (born November 28, 1952) is a Taiwanese politician, accountant, and member of the People First Party and the Kuomintang. She served in the Legislative Yuan from 2007 to 2016. She was first seated as an alternate at-large legistor in 2007, won a full at-large term in 2008, and held the Taipei City Constituency III seat from 2012.

Early life and work

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Luo Shu-lei was born in Datong District, Taipei, and grew up in Dadaocheng; her family was relatively wealthy because her father was engaged in the dyeing industry in Wanhua.[1] After graduating from Keelung Girls' High School, she was admitted to the Accounting Department of Soochow University. While studying in college, she began to intern at the famous Cheng Baojia Accounting Firm and gained recognition. Later, she worked as the financial director and deputy general manager of a foreign company that imported American beef until she obtained the qualification as an accountant and established her own firm.[1]

In 2004, she was elected as the chairman of the Taipei Institute of Certified Public Accountants, becoming the first woman to hold this position. From 2010 to 2015, she served as the Chairman of the National Federation of Accountants Institute of the Republic of China.

Political career

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Early attempts

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In 2002, she participated in politics for the first time. Huang Shanshan was nominated to run for Taipei City Council on behalf of the People First Party, as was Huang Shanshan, who was seeking re-election. However, because Huang Shanshan had the second highest number of votes, the result was unmatched, leaving Luo in the Nangang, Neihu District with less than 900 votes. Badly missed. In 2004, she was ranked 7th among the People's First Party's at-large legislators, but ultimately became the loser. In 2006, she participated in the Million Voices Against Corruption, President Chen Must Go campaign.

Legislator

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In November 2007, Luo Shu-lei succeeded Christina Liu, who had resigned her position as first-ranked legislator in the Non-Partisan Solidarity Union party list.[2] Luo entered the Legislative Yuan as a substitute and served as a as an at-large legislator for two months. In 2007, the People's Party negotiated with the Kuomintang. In the 2008 Taiwanese legislative election, the Kuomintang gave up four at-large legislative seats and co-selected with the People's Party. Luo Shu-lei lost her overseas status due to the overseas Chinese election of legislator Marr Chang-chi, who established a new office in Taiwan. She was disqualified after less than half a year of membership. Originally, the Kuomintang senior leadership tried to integrate Shen Zhihui, who was planning to run for regional legislators, but failed because he had already registered to run. In the end, she was reranked from 30th to 14th. In 2008, the Kuomintang won 20 at-large legislative seats and she was reelected as a legislator on behalf of the Kuomintang.

On the eve of the 2008 Taiwanese presidential election on March 12, 2008, four Kuomintang legislators, Luo Shu-lei, Fai Hrong-tai, Lo Ming-tsai and Chen Jie broke into the gated offices of Democratic Progressive Party candidates Frank Hsieh and Su Tseng-chang in the campaign headquarters of the Reform Hall. They were accused of trespassing and abusing their power. This incident once caused tension in the election of Kuomintang candidate Ma Ying-jeou. The next day, KMT Chairman Wu Po-hsiung and the four legislators apologized to calm the storm.[3]

In 2011, in the KMT primary polls in the Taipei City Constituency III, she defeated incumbent legislator and KMT Vice Chairman Chiang Hsiao-yen with a margin of less than 0.6%. Although the KMT Taipei City Party Headquarters statement was not the final result, Chiang decided to withdraw from the primary election, not seek placement on the KMT party list, and backed Luo Shu-lei in the election, serving as chair of Luo's campaign team. In 2012, she defeated the then-city councilor Jian Yuyan recruited by the Democratic Progressive Party by a margin of nearly 30,000 votes. When she ran for the regional legislator for the first time, she won nearly 120,000 votes and became the regional legislator-elect with the highest number of votes in Taipei City. Continuous victory. The record for the highest number of votes in Taipei City was not broken until 2020 by Kao Chia-yu, but her 118,503 votes in this constituency is still the highest record so far.[4]

In April 2013, Hung Hsiu-chu, then Vice Chairman of the Kuomintang and Vice President of the Legislative Yuan, named party legislator Luo Shu-lei in the Kuomintang Zhongshan Conference newspaper for making a speech that "hurts the party".[5]

On September 10, 2014, Luo Shu-lei accused Taipei mayor candidate Ko Wen-je of money laundering and instigating and assisting others to evade taxes. This accusation triggered the MG149 case.[6]

In 2015, the Kuomintang had two stages of internal recruitment. If the incumbent could achieve a lead of more than 5% in the first stage, he could be recruited. Luo Shu-lei was elected in Taipei City's third electoral district with Chiang Wan-an, the son of former legislator Chiang Hsiao-yen, and city councilor Wang Hong-wei. After entering the second phase of the KMT primary election polls, Wang, who fell behind by more than 10% in the first round, decided to withdraw from the election, while Luo Shu-lei ultimately lost to Chiang Wan-an by more than 10%.

After leaving office, she devoted herself to painting and held personal exhibitions.[7] During the 2022 Taiwanese local elections, Chiang Wan-an resigned as a legislator in order to run for mayor of Taipei City.[8] After the election, she expressed her willingness to represent the Kuomintang in the by-election for the legislative vacancy in Taipei City's Third District, although she admitted in an interview with Taiwan Awakening that the chances were slim. In the end, Taipei City Councilor Wang Hong-wei was recruited and won the election.[9]

Death of Li Hsin

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On September 28, 2018, the first anniversary of Taipei City Councilor Lee Hsin's death after falling from a building. Luo Shu-lei and Huang Chao-shun were accused by his girlfriend Guo Xinzheng in the documentary short series "Who fell to death of Li Xin" hosted by Sheng Zhuru framed by them. Luo Shu-lei believed that the video had caused damage to her reputation and applied to the court to remove the video. However, due to factors such as the ongoing trial and freedom of speech, the court ruled to deny the request and she could protest.[10]

In July 2021, after Huang Chao-shun and Luo Shu-lei accused Guo Xinzheng and Sheng Zhuru of not prosecuting for damaging their reputation, they filed for reconsideration but were rejected by the Taiwan High Prosecutors Office, and the entire case was confirmed.[11] In the aggravated defamation part of the lawsuit, Guo Xinzheng was sentenced to 4 months in prison and fined 8,000 yuan, and Sheng Zhuru was detained for 50 days. Both were fined, and the whole case was settled.[12]

Election record

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year Number of election terms Electoral district Political party to which Number of votes Vote rate selected mark Remark
2008 2008 Taiwanese legislative election Kuomintang 5,010,801 58.12% Ranked 14th
2012 2012 Taiwanese legislative election Taipei City Constituency III 118,503 56.07% leading vote-getter in Taipei[13]

References

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  1. ^ a b "政壇孤鳥羅淑蕾 從會計師到「女煞」立委" [Luo Shulei, the lonely bird in the political world, went from accountant to "female evil" legislator]. United Daily News.
  2. ^ 自由時報電子報 (2007-11-21). "劉憶如離開橘營 轉戰無盟不分區" [Liu Yiru left Orange Camp and joined the Undivided League without division.]. Liberty Times (in Chinese (Taiwan)).
  3. ^ 自由時報電子報 (2008-03-14). "曹啟鴻批藍鴨霸 大開民主倒車" [Cao Qihong criticizes blue duck tyrants and rolls back democracy]. Liberty Times (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 2024-06-17.
  4. ^ "羅淑蕾:恐怖到極點 | 蘋果日報" [Luo Shulei: Horrible to the extreme]. Apple Daily. 2017-03-20. Archived from the original on 2017-03-20.
  5. ^ "藍皮綠骨? 羅淑蕾怒:換民進黨執政,就會愛死我嗎? | ETtoday政治新聞 | ETtoday新聞雲" [Luo Shulei angrily: If the Democratic Progressive Party is in power, will they love me to death?]. ETToday (in Traditional Chinese). 2013-04-26.
  6. ^ "美麗島 Formosa | 連沒靠台灣?柯:想看他繳過多少稅" [Beautiful Island Formosa | Not even close to Taiwan? Ke: I want to see how much tax he has paid.]. 2014-10-09. Archived from the original on 2014-10-09. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
  7. ^ 三立新聞網 (2016-10-31). "改走藝術風!羅淑蕾變畫家 一口氣展出40幅畫作 | 政治 | 三立新聞網 SETN.COM" [Change to art style! Luo Shulei became a painter and exhibited 40 paintings in one breath] (in Chinese). SET News.
  8. ^ 自由時報電子報 (2022-11-27). "羅淑蕾:北市立委補選若獲徵召義不容辭 畢生餘願就是再當立委" [Luo Shulei: I have no choice but to be called up for the Beijing Municipal Legislative Council by-election. My lifelong wish is to be a legislator again.]. Liberty Times (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 2023-08-17.
  9. ^ "羅淑蕾表態願戰 憂得罪國民黨金主 - 台灣醒報 Awakening News Networks" [Luo Shulei expresses willingness to fight, worried about offending KMT funders]. anntw.com. 2022-11-30.
  10. ^ 三立新聞網 (2021-07-11). "「誰摔死李新」最終官司!羅淑蕾告郭新政、盛竹如勝負揭曉 | 社會 | 三立新聞網 SETN.COM" ["Who fell to death Li Xin" final lawsuit! Luo Shulei sues Guo Xinzheng, Sheng Zhuru's victory is announced] (in Chinese). SET News. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
  11. ^ "「誰摔死李新」最終結果出爐 羅淑蕾、黃昭順全被法院打槍了" [The final result of "Who fell to death Li Xin" is out, Luo Shulei and Huang Zhaoshun were all shot by the court]. Yahoo News (in Chinese). 2021-07-11. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
  12. ^ "當旁白被告!盛竹如配「誰摔死了李新?」涉誹謗 拘役50天定讞" [Be the narrator accused! Sheng Zhuru said: "Who fell to death Li Xin?"] (in Traditional Chinese). Mirror Media. Retrieved 2024-06-17.
  13. ^ "2012 ー 第08屆立法委員選舉 臺北市" (in Traditional Chinese). Central Election Commission. Archived from the original on 2022-08-31. Retrieved 2022-09-21.