After being arrested in 1933, Wang issued a public statement stating she was leaving the Communist Party, after which the party expelled her.[8][9] She later joined the Kuomintang and became chair of its women's section in Chongqing. She became a councillor for district six of Chongqing city council and leader of the women's section of the Chongqing branch of Three People's Principles Youth League [zh]. In the 1948 elections for the Legislative Yuan, Wang was a candidate in Chongqing, and was elected to parliament.[10] After being elected, she sat on the Finance and Monetary Committee, the Political and Local Autonomy Committee and the Social Committee.[10] She died in 1949.