He became involved with the
Kuomintang. At the age of 29, Wei became president of the
Judicial Yuan. From 1930 to 1931, Wei served as mayor of special municipality of
Nanjing, then capital of the
Republic of China. Wei was among the Nationalist government insiders implicated in corruption during the 1942-1943 American Dollar Bond scandal. After the 1941 Japanese declaration of war against the United States and the United Kingdom, the two allies sought to support China in a concrete way despite logistical limitations following the loss of
British Burma. The two countries loaned significant amounts of money to the Nationalist government. The Nationalist government decided to use USD$200 million to absorb excess
fabi in an effort to curb inflation. In theory, Chinese purchasers would use fabi to buy bonds at the official exchange rate and be paid in dollars when the bonds were redeemed following victory over Japan. The American Dollar Bonds were issued on March 24, 1942. The public response was poor, with few bond sales. In October 1943,
H.H. Kung sent a secret memorandum to Chiang Kai-shek asking that the bond sales end. Subscriptions were closed on October 15, 1943 and a central bank official falsely announced that all bonds had been sold. Secretly, insiders then purchased the remaining bonds using currency acquired on the black market. The result was a windfall for Nationalist government insiders including Wei, Kung,
Long Yun, members of the
Soong family, and others. As Ambassador to the
United States from September 1942 to 1946, Wei helped secure American material and military support for the Republic of China as it resisted Japanese invasion and Communist insurgency. His public declarations were covered by the
New York Times, and he accompanied
Soong Mei-ling during her visits to Washington, D.C., and New York. He resigned from his post in October 1945, citing personal reasons, and was succeeded by
Wellington Koo, then Ambassador to the Court of St. James. Wei's wife Zheng Yuxiu
christened the
SS China Victory in 1944. The Ceremony had both an ancient Chinese invocation to the sea gods and the traditional American tradition of a bottle of
champagne breaking. The matron of honor at the launching was Mrs. T. K. Chang, wife of the Chinese consul at Los Angeles.
SS China Victory was the first of a long line of Victory ships to leave the
Calship building. During his tenure as Governor of
Taiwan Province, Wei created the Departments of Civil Affairs (民政廳), Finance (財政廳), Construction (建設廳), and Education (教育廳). He also employed thirteen members on the provincial board (省政委員), including those who were Taiwanese-born. He became the
minister of foreign affairs after being the Governor (position succeeded by
Chen Tsyr-shiou). After the
Chinese Communist Revolution, Wei spent some time in
Hong Kong, then made his way back to
Taiwan. Wei served as foreign minister of the
Republic of China during the 1960s and was active in maintaining U.S. support for
Taipei. He also maintained a coalition in the
United Nations General Assembly to reject membership for the
People's Republic of China. He resigned for health reasons in 1971 as
Beijing's campaign to oust the ROC from the
United Nations was on the verge of succeeding. He died in
Taipei on May 18, 1978, at the age 78. ==References==