Taiwanese American in key role in
Romney team
Staff writer, with CNA, Tampa, Florida
Lanhee Chen, son of Taiwanese
immigrants to the US and head of the policy division of US Republican
presidential candidate Mitt Romney¡¦s campaign, center, talks to the press at an
election event for Asian Americans in Tampa, Florida, on Aug. 26.
Photo: CNA
The head of the policy division of
Republican US presidential candidate Mitt Romney¡¦s campaign is Lanhee Chen
(³¯¤¯©y), 34, the son of Taiwanese immigrants.
Chen, whose parents are from Yunlin County, is one of the few Asians in
prominent positions in the Republican presidential campaign.
A politician with a strong academic background, Chen holds four Harvard degrees
¡X one bachelor¡¦s, one master¡¦s and two doctorates, one in law and one in
politics. He worked at a lobbying firm after obtaining his first degree in 1999.
He then worked as a fellow at the Heritage Foundation, where he studied
healthcare and economic policies.
He joined the Republican Party in 2007, the same year that Romney threw his hat
into the ring for the party¡¦s nomination for the 2008 presidential election.
Chen served as a senior aide in the Health and Human Services department during
the administration of former US president George W. Bush.
In 2008, Chen was named chief domestic policy adviser for Romney¡¦s nomination
campaign and joined the current presidential campaign in March last year.
In a profile of Chen in the Washington Post, freelance writer Molly Redden
described him as ¡§brilliant.¡¨
Former US secretary of labor Elaine Chao (»¯¤pÄõ), who was born in Taiwan, said
Chen was a rising star in the Republican Party.
It is rare that people of Asian descent are placed in such high positions in any
US presidential campaign, she said.
Chen¡¦s current post as policy director in the Romney campaign signifies that
Republicans value ethnic diversity and shows the growing importance of
politicians from Asian backgrounds in the party, she said.
Speaking of his Taiwanese roots, Chen, on the sideline of a campaign rally
mainly for Asian voters in Tampa, Florida, earlier this week, said that he had
enjoyed every trip he ever made to Taiwan.
Taiwan has changed a lot in the past decade, which is really exciting, said
Chen, whose parents now live in San Gabriel Valley, California.
Taiwan is an extraordinary place that has a vibrant democracy, he said.
On the observation that many view his China policy as ¡§hawkish,¡¨ Chen said China
was an important trading partner of the US.
Romney does not intend to start a trade war with China, but neither will the US
succumb to China, he said, adding that Romney believes that China should not
manipulate its currency, put up trade barriers or infringe on intellectual
property rights.
Unless China moves toward such changes, Romney will remain committed to holding
China accountable, Chen said.
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