Honorific-Prefix: | Yang Berbahagia Tan Sri Dato' Sri |
Lee Kim Sai | |
Honorific-Suffix: | PSM SSAP DPMS PPN |
Native Name Lang: | zh-my |
Birth Date: | 1 March 1937 |
Birth Place: | Rawang, Selangor, Federated Malay States, British Malaya (now Malaysia) |
Death Place: | Jalan Setia Bakti, Bukit Damansara, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
Resting Place: | Xiao En Nilai Memorial Park, 286 Km, KL-Seremban Highway (South Bound), Nilai, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia |
Office3: | Deputy President of the Malaysian Chinese Association |
Term Start3: | September 1986 |
Term End3: | July 1996 |
President3: | Ling Liong Sik |
Predecessor3: | Ling Liong Sik |
Successor3: | Lim Ah Lek |
Office: | Minister of Health |
Term Start: | 27 October 1990 |
Term End: | 7 May 1995 |
Primeminister: | Mahathir Mohamad |
Deputy: | Mohd Farid Ariffin |
Predecessor: | Ng Cheng Kiat |
Successor: | Chua Jui Meng |
Constituency: | Hulu Langat |
Office1: | Minister of Housing and Local Government |
Monarch1: | Azlan Shah |
Primeminister1: | Mahathir Mohamad |
Deputy1: | Hussein Ahmad Osu Sukam |
Term Start1: | 14 August 1989 |
Term End1: | 26 October 1990 |
Predecessor1: | Ng Cheng Kiat |
Successor1: | Ting Chew Peh |
Constituency1: | Hulu Langat |
Office2: | Minister of Labour |
Monarch2: | Iskandar Azlan Shah |
Primeminister2: | Mahathir Mohamad |
Deputy2: | Zakaria Abdul Rahman (1985–1986) William Lye Chee Hien (1985–1986) Wan Abu Bakar Wan Mohamad (1986–1987) Kalakau Untol (1986–1989) K. Pathmanaban (1987–1989) |
Term Start2: | 21 May 1985 |
Term End2: | 14 August 1989 |
Predecessor2: | Mak Hon Kam |
Constituency2: | Ulu Selangor Hulu Langat |
Constituency Mp5: | Hulu Langat |
Parliament5: | Malaysian |
Term Start5: | 3 August 1986 |
Term End5: | 23 April 1995 |
Predecessor5: | Rosemary Chow Poh Keong (MCA-BN) |
Successor5: | Badrul Hisham Abdul Aziz (UMNO-BN) |
Majority5: | 8,925 (1986) 9,691 (1990) |
Constituency Mp6: | Ulu Selangor |
Parliament6: | Malaysian |
Term Start6: | 26 April 1982 |
Term End6: | 2 August 1986 |
Predecessor6: | Michael Chen (MCA-BN) |
Successor6: | S. Subramaniam (MIC-BN) |
Majority6: | 7,377 (1982) |
Constituency Am7: | Rawang |
Assembly7: | Selangor State Legislative |
Term Start7: | 14 September 1974 |
Term End7: | 21 April 1982 |
Majority7: | 1,374 (1974) 3,196 (1978) |
Predecessor7: | Constituency established |
Successor7: | Tang See Hang (MCA-BN) |
Party: | Malayan Chinese Association (MCA) |
Spouse: | Puan Sri Datin Sri Wan Yuet Fong |
Children: | Boon Kuan, Boon Tim, Boon Siew, Boon Cheng |
Tan Sri Dato' Sri Lee Kim Sai (1 March 1937 – 24 November 2019) was a Malaysian politician. In the 1980s and 1990s, he served as Labour Minister (1985–1989), Housing and Local Government Minister (1989–1990) and Health Minister (1990–1995); and was deputy president of Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) (1986–1996), a major component party of the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition.[1] [2]
Lee was born on 1 March 1937 to a poor family in Ulu Klang, Selangor, and was brought up in Jinjang, Kuala Lumpur. He was educated at Chong Hwa High School in Kuala Lumpur, then trained as a teacher at the Teachers' Training College in Kuala Lumpur. He started teaching in 1957, and rose to become the principal of Kepong Chinese School.[3]
Lee joined the MCA in 1965, and stood for Selangor State Legislative Assembly constituency of Kepong in the 1969 general election, but lost to Tan Chee Khoon of the Parti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia (Gerakan). In the 1974 general election he contested and won the Rawang state seat, which he retained in the 1978 election. He became head of the MCA Youth in 1979, and was elected vice-president of the MCA the same year. He was elected as the Member of Parliament (MP) in the 1982 general election for Ulu Selangor, and was appointed deputy minister in the Prime Minister's Department.[3]
In 1984, in a row over allegations of fictitious membership that supported the Acting President Dr. Neo Yee Pan, he was expelled from the MCA along with Tan Koon Swan, Ling Liong Sik and others by the Acting President. In the ensuing party election to resolve the crisis, Tan Koon Swan was elected president with the largest majority in the party's history, and Lee was elected one of the party vice-presidents as well as the secretary general.[4] [5] Tan however resigned the next year over a scandal involving his business dealings in Singapore, and Ling Liong Sik took over as president while Lee moved up to become the Deputy President. Lee was appointed Minister of Labour in 1985, and in 1989, he became Minister of Housing and Local Government. He then became the Minister of Health from 1990 until 1995. Lee also successfully won the Hulu Langat federal constituency for two terms consecutively in both the 1986 general election and 1990 general election.
In 1993, he attempted to challenge Ling for the leadership of the MCA, but backed down after failing to gain enough support. He retired from politics in 1996.[6]
Lee was outspoken on a number of sensitive issues, such as questioning the Malaysian New Economic Policy and the political dominance of the Malays. In particular, in early November 1986, the Selangor MCA of which he was its head, passed a resolution in its annual convention calling on the government to review the Sedition Act and to make it an offence to refer or call any of the country's three major races as immigrants or pendatang. The resolution, which stated that Malaysia's three major races originated from other countries and that none of them should brand the others as immigrants and claim themselves to be natives.[7] This was interpreted as challenging the bumiputra status of the Malays, which led to calls for his sacking by members of United Malays National Organisation (UMNO),[8] and the withdrawal of his datukship by the Sultan of Selangor (later restored). He also joined a protest rally with the opposition; Democratic Action Party (DAP) objecting to the appointments of senior assistants and supervisors without qualifications in Mandarin in Chinese primary schools.[9] [10]
After suffering from a stroke since October 2018, Lee died on 24 November 2019 at 12.30 a.m. at family home in Jalan Setia Bakti, Bukit Damansara, Kuala Lumpur. His remains were buried at Xiao En Memorial Park, Nilai, Negeri Sembilan.[11]
Constituency | Government | Votes | Pct | Opposition(s) | Votes | Pct | Ballots cast | Majority | Turnout | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1969 | N03 Kepong | (MCA) | N/A | N/A | (Gerakan) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |||
1974 | N13 Rawang | (MCA) | 3,701 | 48.72% | Tan Heng Swee (DAP) | 2,327 | 30.63% | 21,803 | 6,281 | 71.88% | |||
J.P. Samuel Raj (PEKEMAS) | 847 | 1.115% | |||||||||||
Chou Yew Koh (IND) | 722 | 9.50% | |||||||||||
1978 | (MCA) | 6,763 | 60.80% | Khoo Chin Tow (DAP) | 3,567 | 32.07% | N/A | 3,196 | N/A | ||||
Hussein Ibrahim (PAS) | 667 | 6.00% | |||||||||||
Zainuddin Karim (PEKEMAS) | 127 | 1.14% |
Constituency | Candidate | Votes | Pct | Opponent(s) | Votes | Pct | Ballots cast | Majority | Turnout | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | P075 Ulu Selangor | (MCA) | 14,138 | 48.70% | Mohamed Arif | 6,761 | 23.29% | 30,088 | 7,377 | 74.68% | ||||
Wong Kim Wah (IND) | 5,232 | 18.02% | ||||||||||||
Pan Su Peng (DAP) | 2,897 | 9.98% | ||||||||||||
1986 | P089 Hulu Langat | (MCA) | 22,217 | 57.38% | Lam Man Yoon (DAP) | 13,292 | 34.33% | 39,651 | 8,925 | 71.37% | ||||
bgcolor= | Ahamad Kamari (SDP) | 3,208 | 8.29% | |||||||||||
1990 | (MCA) | 28,714 | 60.84% | Lim Ann Koon (DAP) | 18,483 | 39.16% | 48,954 | 9,691 | 76.18% |