Ho is the eldest of four children of a businessman, Ho Eng Hong (born 1929) and his wife, Chan Chiew Ping (1931–2005). She has two brothers and a sister. Her sister, Ho Peng, is the chairperson of the
Singapore Examinations and Assessment Board, while her brother, Ho Sing, is an executive director of
Starhill Global REIT. She met her husband,
Lee Hsien Loong, the eldest son of former Singapore Prime Minister
Lee Kuan Yew, while starting out in her career at the
Ministry of Defence together with former prime minister
Goh Chok Tong. They married on 17 December 1985 and have two sons, Hongyi and Haoyi. Ho is stepmother to Lee's two children from his first marriage—daughter Xiuqi and son Yipeng.
Social media activity Ho is an active social media user and regularly shares her views and interacts with others on
Facebook. According to news reports, Ho posted on Facebook an average of 4,800 per month from 2019 - 2020 and has published about 1,830 posts on average from 2015 - 2020. In 2020, she had more than 101,000 Facebook followers. At times, Ho has made more than 200 posts per day. She has occasionally re-shared several posts made by members of the
Cabinet in quick succession. Some of Ho's public posts have drawn significant media attention and have been the subject of public controversy in Singapore and abroad. On 11 April 2020, Ho shared an article on Facebook about
Taiwan’s donation of masks to Singapore with the following caption: "Errr". Her comment was made shortly after media reports suggested that a ban on the export of masks imposed by Taipei during the
COVID-19 pandemic had prevented
ST Engineering from exporting masks produced in Taiwan to Singapore. Some commentators suggested that Ho was ungrateful for the donation of masks to Singapore by Taiwan. Ho subsequently amended her caption to state that she was "forever grateful... to all our friends and friends of friends in Taiwan". In August 2023, amidst public debate over then-presidential candidate
Tan Kin Lian's posts about 'pretty girls', Ho shared her views on Facebook, suggesting that the
Presidential Elections Committee should not be expected to be the "arbiter of moral standards" and that "[m]aybe TKL had asked for permission to take the pictures or to post". ==References==