After earning a Cornell doctoral degree in agricultural economics at age 45, Lee returned to Taiwan, where he was appointed to a number of governmental positions, including the mayor of Taipei (1978-81) and the provincial governor of Taiwan (1981-84).
In 1984 he was nominated by President Chiang Ching-kuo (Chiang Kai-shek’s eldest son) as his vice president. When Chiang died in 1988, Lee succeeded him as president and chairman of the Kuomintang. In 1995 he was elected outright and served until 2000.
“He was proud to call himself a Cornellian,” said Cornell President Martha E. Pollack, “and his commitment to academic excellence set an example for generations of Taiwanese students – many of whom were inspired to follow his path to Cornell.”
One of those who followed in his footsteps was Taiwan’s current president, Tsai Ing-wen, who earned her LL.M. degree at Cornell Law School in 1980 and was elected president in 2016. She tweeted: “This is a day of mourning for me & all Taiwanese with the passing of our former President Lee Teng-hui. He laid the foundation for a democracy built on pride & our own identity, & his legacy will guide generations of Taiwanese to face the challenges ahead with courage.”
Lee’s rapid rise at Taiwan’s political scene happened shortly after earning his doctorate at Cornell, said Chen Jian, the Hu Shih Professor of History Emeritus, who met Lee twice when he was president.
“Lee will be remembered as a leader who played a significant role in Taiwan’s transition toward democratization and who also shaped the trajectory of Taiwan’s increasing separation from mainland China,” Chen said. “History will judge.”
In a 1995 Cornell Chronicle story, Lee – called “T.H.” by his professors – was older than most graduate students. He was reserved “and not an extrovert or a politician,” said the late Kenneth L. Robinson, a professor of agricultural economics, who was on Lee’s dissertation committee.