'' Dai's fluency in Japanese, unusual for a Chinese young man, attracted the attention of
Sun Yat-sen. He became Sun's translator and then his confidential secretary. After the
Kuomintang failed to overthrow
Yuan Shikai, he went to Tokyo to join the
Chinese Revolutionary Party in 1914. He attended the first national congress of the Chinese Kuomintang in 1924, where he was elected a member of the Central Executive Committee, then later a member of the Standing Committee, and the Minister of Propaganda. Soon after Sun's death in 1925, he published a controversial book that reinterpreted Sun's legacy. He claimed Sun derived his ideology chiefly from
Confucianism instead of Western philosophies and that Sun was a traditionalist. This was praised by the KMT's right-wing but condemned by leftists and communists. After the right's triumph, Dai's interpretation became the dominant one within the KMT. In 1926, he served as principal of the
Sun Yat-sen University, and the chief of politics at
Whampoa Academy, with
Zhou Enlai as his deputy. From 1928 until 1948, he served as head of the
Examination Yuan. From October 1928 to June 1948, his official positions consisted of: • State Councillor (國民政府國府委員) • Director-General of
Sun Yat-sen University (中山大學委員長) • Member of
Kuomintang Central Executive Committee (中央執行委員會委員): 1924 • Member of Standing Committee (常務委員): 1924 • Minister of Information (宣傳部長): 1924 • President of the
Academia Historica (國史館館長): unable to attend due to illness Dai was one of the lyricists of "
National Anthem of the Republic of China". He also wrote: •
The Fundamentals of the Principles of Sun Yat-sen (孫文主義之哲學基礎) • ''The People's Revolution and Kuomintang'' (國民革命與中國國民黨) •
The Complete Book of Sun Yat-sen (孫中山全書) •
National Flag Anthem of the Republic of China (中華民國國旗歌) ==Later years and death==