Chiang began his career in the foreign service, serving in the ROC embassy in
Washington, D.C., from 1974 to 1977. In the 1980s, he held various administrative posts in the ROC Foreign Ministry specializing in North American Affairs. He was Administrative Vice Minister from 1986 to 1990, Director General, of the Overseas Affairs Department in 1990, and Political Vice Minister from 1990 to 1993. In 1993 he was appointed to the
cabinet-level post of Chairman of the
Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission and served as a member of the
KMT Central Standing Committee. He was selected a member of the
National Assembly in 1996. He was
Foreign Minister from 1996 to 1997, vice premier in 1997, and Secretary-General of the
presidential office in 1999. He was speculated as a potential running mate for
Lien Chan on the KMT ticket in the
2000 presidential elections until a sex scandal involving a mistress caused him to resign on 22 December 1999. Chang announced his candidacy for the December 2001 legislative elections in March 2001. One of his opponents in the December 2001 elections was his alleged 1999 mistress, but she received only a fraction of his eventual winning vote count. From 2002 through 2012, he was a member of the
Legislative Yuan, first representing the constituency of
Taipei City South from 2002 to 2005 and then representing Taipei City North from 2005 through 2012. He served as the Chairman of Interior Affairs Committee while in the legislature. In January 2006, Chiang declared his candidacy as a KMT candidate for the
Taipei Mayor, but withdrew from the race in April, stating he did so for party solidarity. At the end of March 2007, Chiang staged a rally at the
Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall in support of his grandfather, late President
Chiang Kai-shek. The Memorial hall was later
renamed, in a hotly controversial move, by the Executive Yuan, to the National Taiwan Democracy Memorial Hall, striking out the name of Chiang Kai-shek temporarily; the Memorial's name was restored on 21 August 2008. In the
2008 Republic of China legislative election, John Chiang won re-election in his district of Taipei City North. In 2009, he met
Kong Dongmei, the granddaughter of Chinese leader
Mao Zedong, who was part of a delegation from China to promote cultural and educational ties between China and Taiwan. The meeting was then seen as a sign of the improvement of
Cross-Strait relations. In April 2011, Chiang lost a poll for the Kuomintang legislative candidacy to
Lo Shu-lei, a fellow Kuomintang legislator, in the Taipei Zhongshan-Songshan electoral district by a margin of 0.58 percent. The poll was made binding for the KMT nomination and Lo Shu-lei was later elected to the Legislative Yuan. In March 2015, Chiang's son Wan-an announced his candidacy for the Legislative Yuan in the KMT primary for Taipei's Zhongshan-Songshan district, which put him against Lo Shu-lei and
Wang Hung-wei for the KMT nomination.
Chiang Wan-an subsequently won the KMT primary in May 2015, quickly gaining name recognition thanks in part to his chats with prospective voters as they waited for garbage trucks. John Chiang's participation in his son's campaign was limited to moral support and babysitting his son's children. == Family tree ==