"Hsieh should give a clear account of what the money was for," Lee said, adding he suspected the mayor also took part in the Zanadau affair.
With a masters in Electric Engineering and a PhD in business administration, Lee said his hunches rarely prove to be wrong.
The allegations at one point threw Hsieh's mayoral campaign into disarray as he canceled campaign events on Dec 5, two days before the vote, and traveled to Taipei to check his bank accounts. The mayor explained the money at issue was a back debt owed to him, which had nothing to do with the Zanadau project.
On election day, Hsieh managed to retain his mayoralty by a narrow margin, with sympathetic supporters vowing to besiege Lee's Tainan office to seek revenge on Hsieh's behalf.
Undaunted, some 300 of Lee's supporters amassed outside his office on Dec. 9, chanting slogans in a bid to safeguard their lawmaker.
A clash was avoided after the DPP camp called off the planned demonstration.
"The threatened protest was taken as a provocative act by my constituency as a whole," said Lee, who entered politics seven years ago when he returned from the US to take care of his parents.
After he questioned Hsieh's ties to the business community, the lawmaker said his family members had received phone calls threatening their safety.
"To be honest, I miss my days as an entrepreneur abroad," he said. "As a politician I have no privacy at all, not to mention any enjoyment of life."
In the US, Lee ran his own company and factory. He started his career as a hardware designer and sold his first patent on a motherboard for US$180,000.
He has since warned the nation to brace itself for another Zanadau-like scandal, saying the alleged vote-buying by Kaohsiung City councilors revealed only the tip of the iceberg. "It is contracts for the city's mass rapid transit system that are the real prize contractors are after," Lee said, declining to elaborate.
Industrious and headstrong, the two-term legislator drew mixed views from his fellow colleagues.
KMT lawmaker Cheng Feng-shih (
Hung Hsiu-chu (



