Lee San Choon Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Yang Berbahagia Tan Sri Dato'
Lee San Choon
Birth Name:Lee Soon Seng
Birth Date:24 March 1935
Birth Place:Pekan, Pahang, Federated Malay States, British Malaya (now Malaysia)
Death Place:Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Office:4th President of the Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA)
Term Start:August 1975
Term End:25 March 1983
Predecessor:Tan Siew Sin
Successor:Tan Koon Swan
Office1:Ministerial roles
Subterm1:1964–1969
Suboffice1:Parliamentary Secretary of Labour
Subterm2:1969–1971
Suboffice2:Deputy Minister with Special Functions
Subterm3:1971–1973
Suboffice3:Assistant Minister of Labour
Subterm4:1973–1974
Suboffice4:Minister of Technology, Research and Coordination of New Villages
Subterm5:1974–1978
Suboffice5:Minister of Labour and Manpower
Subterm6:1978–1979
Suboffice6:Minister of Works and Public Amenities
Subterm7:1979–1983
Suboffice7:Minister of Transport
Office8:Faction represented in Dewan Rakyat
Subterm8:1959–1974
Suboffice8:Alliance Party
Subterm9:1974–1983
Suboffice9:Barisan Nasional
Party:Malayan Chinese Association (MCA) (1957 – 2023)
Otherparty:Barisan Nasional (BN)
Children:2

Lee San Choon (; 24 March 1935 – 3 March 2023) was a Malaysian politician and businessman. He was the fourth president of Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA), a major component party of the ruling coalition Barisan Nasional (BN) from 1975 to 1983. He led the party in three general elections in Malaysia, most successfully in the 1982 general election. He held various ministerial posts in the cabinet of the Malaysian government from 1969 to 1983, such as Labour and Manpower Minister, Works and Public Utilities Minister, as well as Transport Minister.

Early life

Lee San Choon was born on 24 March 1935 in Pekan, Pahang to Lee Debin and Yang Zhenling, immigrant parents from Tianmen, Hubei in China.[1] The third of six children, he lost his mother at the age of ten, and he had five other half-siblings after his father remarried.

Lee had his early education in a Chinese-medium school, Chung Hwa School in Pekan, before being transferred to Sultan Ahmad School for a year of English education. The family moved when he was 12 to Johor Bahru in Johor, where he started his secondary education at the English College.[2] After obtaining his Cambridge GCE O-Level, he taught English at a primary school in Geylang, Singapore.[3] He completed his A-Level in 1955, and although he had intended to continue his education abroad, family financial constraint forced him to abandon the plan. He held a minor position in the government's Social Welfare Department, then worked as a clerk in a textile factory.[4]

Political career

Early career

Lee San Choon joined the Malayan Chinese Association in 1957. He was elected a member of parliament in the Kluang Utara parliamentary seat in the 1959 Malayan general election, winning the former socialist stronghold by a majority of 1,458 votes, and became the youngest MP in Malaya at the age of 24.[5] After Kluang Utara, he represented the Segamat Selatan constituency from 1964 to 1974 and Segamat until 1982. He was elected Chairman of MCA Youth in 1962. He caused a stir when he urged the leaders of MCA to resign in 1963. In 1965, MCA Youth supported the campaign to make Chinese a national language. Due to the issue's political sensitivity, he offered to resign but was persuaded to stay.[6] In 1968, as MCA Youth leader, he was involved in the creation of the Koperatif Serbaguna Malaysia Bhd (KSM), a business organization based on the cooperative principle.[4]

After the 13 May incident in 1969, Lee was appointed Deputy Minister with Special Functions in the Cabinet by the National Operations Council. When parliamentary democracy was restored in 1971, he was appointed Assistant Labour Minister in the new cabinet. He became the Deputy President of MCA in 1972. He was made Minister with Special Functions in 1973, then the Minister of Technology, Research, and New Village Coordination the same year.[7]

1974 - 1981: MCA leadership

On 8 April 1974, just before the 1974 general election, he was made Acting President of MCA after Tun Tan Siew Sin resigned on the grounds of ill health.[8] He was then elected President of MCA in August 1975. The cabinet posts allocated to MCA had declined in importance as the influence of MCA waned after the expanded coalition Barisan Nasional dominated by UMNO was formed,[9] and the various offices in the Malaysian government held by Lee as President of MCA included the Labour and Manpower Minister, the Works and Public Utilities Minister, and the Transport Minister.

While he was president of MCA, Lee launched five significant initiatives. These were the building of Wisma MCA, the headquarters of the party; the setting up of a building fund for Tunku Abdul Rahman College to expand opportunity for tertiary education for the Chinese population; the founding of Multi-Purpose Holdings Berhad, an investment holding company; the establishment of Malaysian Chinese Cultural Society; and a drive to increase MCA membership.[5] [8] Lee tried shifting the image of the party from one that's dominated by an English-educated elite and wealthy , and continued with the attempt to broaden the appeal of the party and brought in professionals, including some leftists.[8] The membership of MCA doubled from 200,000 to 400,000 during his tenure.[2]

In 1978, Lee did not support the attempt to make Chinese a national language or the establishment of an independent Chinese university, and he also proposed converting Chinese secondary schools into national-type schools, all of which disappointed many in the Chinese community. Education was a contentious issue in the 1978 general election, and MCA saw a small loss of support, winning 17 of the 28 parliamentary seats contested, which was down 2 from 1974.[2] However, in a bid to improve Chinese participation in government universities which had declined due to government policy of positive discrimination in favour of Malays, Lee led a delegation to persuade the prime minister Tun Hussein Onn to fix the intake of non-Bumiputras in the five government universities at 45 percent in 1979.[10] Also in 1979, in a period of internal political struggle, he fought off a challenge from Michael Chen for the presidency of MCA and was re-elected.[11]

1982–1983: Electoral success and resignation

In the 1982 general election, in response to a taunt by the opposition Democratic Action Party (DAP) that the MCA's leadership did not dare contest seats with a large urban Chinese majority, Lee accepted the challenge and contested the parliamentary seat for Seremban against the DAP chairman Chen Man Hin who had held that seat since 1969.[12] Lee won the contest by a small majority, and also led his party to a landslide victory, winning 24 out of 28 allocated parliamentary seats and 55 out of 62 state seats.

However, on 24 March 1983, at the height of his career, Lee unexpectedly resigned his cabinet post of Minister of Transport for unspecified reasons and relinquished his position as President of MCA a day later.[13] He never gave an explanation for his resignation, apart from stating in an interview with the Chinese edition of Asiaweek in 2000 that he was "stabbed in the back" by UMNO leaders in the 1982 election.[14] [15]

Business career

After he retired from politics, Lee was appointed chair/chief executive officer of Multi-Purpose Holdings Bhd, Chair of Malaysian French Bank Bhd, and Chair of Industrial Oxygen Incorporated Bhd. He was also Chairman of Lee & Mok Sdn Bhd, Sunrise Bhd, Magerk Sdn Bhd, and Worldspan Travel (M) Sdn Bhd.[16]

Personal life

Lee married Dianne Mok Thye Yuen in 1962. They have two children, son Kwan Por and daughter Ann Gee .[17]

He received an Honorary Doctorate of Law from Campbell University, North Carolina, United States.[18]

Death

Lee died on 3 March 2023 at age 87.[19] [20]

Election results

Year!
ConstituencyCandidateVotesPctOpponent(s)VotesPctBallots castMajorityTurnout
1959P095 Kluang Utara, Johore (MCA)5,98556.92%bgcolor= Wee Lee Fong (SF)4,53043.08%10,5941,45577.99%
1964P090 Segamat Selatan, Johore (MCA)11,35563.33%bgcolor= Chiu Siu Meng (SF)4,95627.64%18,6936,39982.43%
bgcolor= Tan Luan Hong (UDP)1,6199.03%
1969 (MCA)14,47073.63%Abdul Rahman Abdul Rasool (IND)5,18326.37%21,3059,28771.66%
1974P100 Segamat, Johore (MCA)17,36974.42%Lee Ah Meng (DAP)5,97125.58%24,29811,39881.28%
1978 (MCA)22,09882.22%Abdul Hak Fadzil (PAS)4,78017.78%17,318
1982P091 Seremban, Negeri Sembilan (MCA)23,25850.93%Chen Man Hin (DAP)22,41349.07%46,90384577.22%

Honours

Places named after him

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Southeast Asian Personalities of Chinese Descent: A Biographical Dictionary . Leo Suryadinata . Wong Wun Bin . 534–536 . Institute of Southeast Asian Studies . 2012 . 978-9814345217 .
  2. Web site: 第4任总会长:丹斯里李三春 . 马华公会 Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) . https://web.archive.org/web/20110809041703/http://www.mca.org.my/cn/about-us/about-mca/history-zone/former-presidents/tan-sri-lee-san-choon/. 9 August 2011 .
  3. Book: Wong, Win Bin (黄文斌). 李三春 时势英雄之得失功〉. 马来西亚华人历史与人物 政治篇 匡政与流变. Ho Khai Leong (何启良). 200–242. Centre for Malaysian Chinese Studies . 2003. 983-9673-72-6. Kuala Lumpur. zh.
  4. Book: Chinese Business in Malaysia: Accumulation, Ascendance, Accommodation . Edmund Terence Gomez . 72–73. Routledge . 2012 . 978-0415517379 .
  5. Web site: Tan Sri Lee San Choon . Malaysian Chinese Association . https://web.archive.org/web/20110420234247/http://www.mca.org.my/en/about-us/about-mca/history-zone/former-presidents/tan-sri-lee-san-choon/ . 20 April 2011.
  6. News: 马华第四任总会长 李三春逝世 . Orient Online . 3 March 2023 .
  7. Web site: Tan Sri Lee San Choon (President April 1974 – March 1983) . MCA .
  8. Book: Chinese Schools in Peninsular Malaysia: The Struggle for Survival . Ting Hui Lee . 127–128 . Institute of Southeast Asian Studies . 2011 . 9789814279215 .
  9. Book: Malaysian Politics Under Mahathir . Diane K. Mauzy, R. S. Milne . Routledge . 91 . 1999 . 978-0415171434 .
  10. News: 李三春与巫统谈判达"628方案" 大学新生土著55 . Sinchew.com.my. 3 March 2023 .
  11. Book: Malaysia's 1982 General Election . Harold A. Crouch . 9–12. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies . 1982. 978-9971902452 .
  12. Book: Malaysia's 1982 General Election. Harold A. Crouch . 48 . Institute of Southeast Asian Studies . 1982 . 978-9971902452.
  13. News: San Choon Resigns . New Straits Times . 24 March 1983 .
  14. News: Backstabbing: Et tu San Choon? . Adbullah Ahmad . New Straits Times . 26 September 2000 .
  15. News: 大选撼赢曾敏兴如日中天李三春突引退未解之谜 . Zh. 3 March 2023 . Sinchew.com.my .
  16. Web site: Annual Report 2001. 12. Sunrise Berhad. i3investor.
  17. News: MCA leaders, friends and families bid farewell to Lee San Choon . Allison. Lai. 7 March 2023. The Star .
  18. Web site: Tan Sri Lee San Choon. Malaysian Chinese Association.
  19. News: 马华前总会长李三春与世长辞 . Sinchew.com.my . Chinese.
  20. News: Former MCA President Lee San Choon Passes Away. The Star. 3 March 2023.
  21. Web site: Senarai Penuh Penerima Darjah Kebesaran, Bintang dan Pingat Persekutuan Tahun 1963..
  22. Web site: Senarai Penuh Penerima Darjah Kebesaran, Bintang dan Pingat Persekutuan Tahun 1990..
  23. Book: Johore Sultan's Birthday List Parade. 3 November 1973. New Straits Times.
  24. Book: Maktab Sultan Abu Bakar (English College) : Sejarah dan Biografi 100 Tokoh Melakar Kegemilangan. Percetakan Bumi Restu Sdn Bhd . Kamdi Kamil . 2014. 978-983-42249-8-1. 1st. Johor Bahru. 130. 892514524.
  25. Web site: Hana Naz Harun . Former MCA president Lee San Choon dies . New Straits Times . 4 March 2023 . 3 March 2023.