Background
Lee was born in Wellington, but has spent much of her life in Auckland.
Lee was born in Wellington, but has spent much of her life in Auckland.
She served as deputy leader (and briefly leader) of the Alliance party, and was later High Commissioner to Niue. Her political career, however, did not begun until 1983, with her election to the Waiheke County Council. She became chairperson of the Council in 1989.
She was formerly married to Mike Lee.
In 1991, Lee became president of Mana Motuhake. In the 1993 elections, Lee successfully contested the Auckland Central electorate as an Alliance candidate, defeating the incumbent Richard Prebble.
In November 1994, when Jim Anderton stepped down as leader of the Alliance for personal reasons, Lee took his place. Anderton returned to the leadership in May 1995.
Lee lost her Auckland Central seat to Labour"s Judith Tizard at the 1996 elections.
Cabinet member
When a Labour-Alliance coalition government was formed after the 1999 elections, Lee became Minister of Local Government, Minister of Conservation, and Associate Minister of Māori Affairs. She was ranked seventh in Cabinet. However, in 2002, the Alliance began to split between a strongly left-wing faction (led by Matt McCarten and Laila Harré) and a more moderate faction (led by Anderton), Lee generally backed Anderton, but eventually decided to retire from politics.
In the 2002 elections, she did not stand for either the Alliance (now led by McCarten and Harré) or Anderton"s new Progressive Coalition.
Lee was High Commissioner to Niue, representing the New Zealand and United Kingdom governments, from 12 February 2003 to 3 October 2005. In September 2006 Lee was appointed to the board of Housing New Zealand.
In July 2007 she was appointed to the board of Te Papa Tongarewa. 1983–1989: Member, Waiheke County Council
1989: Chair, Waiheke County Council
1989–1994 (January): Councillor, Auckland City Council
1999 (December) – 2002: Minister of the Crown (Local Government, Conservation, Associate Māori Affairs), Labour-Alliance government.
Her involvement in politics began with the foundation of Mana Motuhake, a Māori issues party, in 1979.
When Waiheke was amalgamated into Auckland proper, Lee became a member of the Auckland City Council. Shortly after this, Mana Motuhake agreed to become a founding member of the Alliance, a coalition of minor parties. 1993–1996: (Alliance), Auckland Central
1996–2002: (List) (Alliance).