Early attempts In 2002, she participated in politics for the first time.
Huang Shanshan was nominated to run for Taipei City Council on behalf of the People First Party, as was Huang Shanshan, who was seeking re-election. However, because Huang Shanshan had the second highest number of votes, the result was unmatched, leaving Luo in the
Nangang,
Neihu District with less than 900 votes. Badly missed. In 2004, she was ranked 7th among the People's First Party's at-large legislators, but ultimately became the loser. In 2006, she participated in the
Million Voices Against Corruption, President Chen Must Go campaign.
Legislator In November 2007, Luo Shu-lei succeeded
Christina Liu, who had resigned her position as first-ranked legislator in the
Non-Partisan Solidarity Union party list. Luo entered the Legislative Yuan as a substitute and served as an at-large legislator for two months. In 2007, the People's Party negotiated with the
Kuomintang. In the
2008 Taiwanese legislative election, the Kuomintang gave up four at-large legislative seats and co-selected with the People's Party. Luo Shu-lei lost her overseas status due to the overseas Chinese election of legislator
Marr Chang-chi, who established a new office in Taiwan. She was disqualified after less than half a year of membership. Originally, the Kuomintang senior leadership tried to integrate Shen Zhihui, who was planning to run for regional legislators, but failed because he had already registered to run. In the end, she was reranked from 30th to 14th. In 2008, the Kuomintang won 20 at-large legislative seats and she was reelected as a legislator on behalf of the Kuomintang. On the eve of the
2008 Taiwanese presidential election on March 12, 2008, four Kuomintang legislators, Luo Shu-lei,
Fai Hrong-tai,
Lo Ming-tsai and Chen Jie broke into the gated offices of Democratic Progressive Party candidates
Frank Hsieh and
Su Tseng-chang in the campaign headquarters of the Reform Hall. They were accused of trespassing and abusing their power. This incident once caused tension in the election of Kuomintang candidate
Ma Ying-jeou. The next day, KMT Chairman
Wu Po-hsiung and the four legislators apologized to calm the storm. In 2011, in the KMT primary polls in the
Taipei City Constituency III, she defeated incumbent legislator and KMT Vice Chairman
Chiang Hsiao-yen with a margin of less than 0.6%. Although the KMT Taipei City Party Headquarters statement was not the final result, Chiang decided to withdraw from the primary election, not seek placement on the KMT party list, and backed Luo Shu-lei in the election, serving as chair of Luo's campaign team. In 2012, she defeated the then-city councilor Jian Yuyan recruited by the Democratic Progressive Party by a margin of nearly 30,000 votes. When she ran for the regional legislator for the first time, she won nearly 120,000 votes and became the regional legislator-elect with the highest number of votes in Taipei City. Continuous victory. The record for the highest number of votes in Taipei City was not broken until 2020 by
Kao Chia-yu, but her 118,503 votes in this constituency is still the highest record so far. In April 2013,
Hung Hsiu-chu, then Vice Chairman of the Kuomintang and Vice President of the Legislative Yuan, named party legislator Luo Shu-lei in the Kuomintang Zhongshan Conference newspaper for making a speech that "hurts the party". On September 10, 2014, Luo Shu-lei accused Taipei mayor candidate
Ko Wen-je of money laundering and instigating and assisting others to evade taxes. This accusation triggered the MG149 case. In 2015, the Kuomintang had two stages of internal recruitment. If the incumbent could achieve a lead of more than 5% in the first stage, he could be recruited. Luo Shu-lei was elected in Taipei City's third electoral district with
Chiang Wan-an, the son of former legislator Chiang Hsiao-yen, and city councilor
Wang Hong-wei. After entering the second phase of the KMT primary election polls, Wang, who fell behind by more than 10% in the first round, decided to withdraw from the election, while Luo Shu-lei ultimately lost to Chiang Wan-an by more than 10%. After leaving office, she devoted herself to painting and held personal exhibitions. During the
2022 Taiwanese local elections, Chiang Wan-an resigned as a legislator in order to run for mayor of Taipei City. After the election, she expressed her willingness to represent the Kuomintang in the by-election for the legislative vacancy in Taipei City's Third District, although she admitted in an interview with Taiwan Awakening that the chances were slim. In the end, Taipei City Councilor
Wang Hong-wei was recruited and won the election. == Death of Li Hsin ==