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Hong Kong Passes Xi Plan to End Only Open Elections in China

Security personnel raise the flags of China, left, and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) outside the Legislative Council building in Hong Kong, China, on Monday, March 29, 2021. China's National People's Congress is holding a standing committee meeting on March 29 and 30 to review draft revisions regarding the elections of Hong Kong Chief Executive and Legislative Council, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

(Bloomberg) --Hong Kong’s legislature approved a sweeping, Beijing-drafted overhaul of the city’s elections, dramatically curtailing the opposition’s ability to participate in government on the same day that authorities banned a massive pro-democracy vigil.

By Kari Lindberg and Chloe Lo
May 27, 2021, 10:20 AM – Updated on May 27, 2021, 1:01 PM
Word Count: 823

The Legislative Council voted 40-2 to approve measures Thursday creating a review committee to vet candidates for elected office and ensure they’re “patriots.” All candidates must also be approved by national security officials in the Hong Kong police force to determine whether they can be trusted to uphold local laws and “respect” the ruling Communist Party.

The bill’s passage marks the culmination of Beijing’s efforts to take control of how the former British colony chooses its leaders, giving it a veto over candidates for office following historic and sometimes violent unrest in 2019. It effectively ends China’s only experiment with open elections, a vestige of the democratic system implemented during last years of colonial rule.

Earlier Thursday, Hong Kong police banned for a second straight year a pro-democracy group’s application to hold an annual candlelight vigil marking China’s 1989 crackdown in Tiananmen Square. The decision, which police attributed to measures intended to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, raised questions about the future of an event that has symbolized the continued right to freedom of expression under Hong Kong’s “one country, two systems” framework.

Alfred Wu, an associate professor who specializes in Hong Kong at the National University of Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, said the twin milestones illustrate how Hong Kong’s political system is “moving much closer to the mainland.” “The Chinese system really emphasizes national security, and this is now evident in Hong Kong,” Wu said.

China’s Expanding Toolbox to Quell Hong Kong Dissent: QuickTake

Chinese lawmakers passed a proposal in March to overhaul how the city chooses its chief executive, and give a body dominated by pro-Beijing elites more power to nominate legislators. President Xi Jinping signed the order implementing the changes, which the government defended as necessary to reduce polarization, curb the influence of “foreign forces” and let authorities focus on improving the economy.

A spokesperson for the Hong Kong & Macau Affairs Office in Beijing said in a statement that the overhaul would open a “new chapter of good governance” and return the city’s development “to the right track.”

The measure passed with little debate since Hong Kong’s opposition resigned en masse last year to protest Beijing’s crackdown, and many former lawmakers have since been jailed pending trial on criminal charges. Cheng Chung-tai, a non-establishment lawmaker who didn’t resign last year, and Pierre Chan, who represents the medical sector, were the only two lawmakers to vote against the bill.

‘Mutual Destruction Camp’

“Everything is about politics, and everything is about elections,” pro-establishment lawmaker Priscilla Leung said during legislative discussions Wednesday. Referring to opposition politicians who cheered on protesters, she added: “To ensure that power will not be given to the mutual destruction camp to create chaos in Hong Kong, the central authorities had to intervene.”

Other changes to Hong Kong’s election system include:

  • Reducing the number of directly elected lawmakers to 20 from 35.
  • Expanding the number of Legislative Council seats to 90 from 70 and the Election Committee that picks the city’s leader by 300 members to 1,500, moves that give Beijing-aligned representatives a bigger role.

The U.S., the U.K., Japan and the European Union have condemned China’s efforts to roll back civil liberties in Hong Kong. Several dozen former opposition politicians and pro-democracy activists are in jail awaiting trial on charges they attended unauthorized protests or violated the sweeping national security law.

Nonetheless, the Hong Kong government blamed the decision to ban the Tiananmen vigil Thursday on the need to “strengthen epidemic control by guarding against the importation of cases and the resurgence of domestic infections.” The organizer of the event, the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, said that it would appeal the decision and “fight for the right for a lawful vigil.”

Voting to choose representatives for the Election Committee’s various sectors is set for Sept. 19. An election for new members of the Legislative Council will be held on Dec. 19 after a delay of what would be more than a year, a move officials said was necessary due to the pandemic. The poll for the first chief executive under the new rules is scheduled for March 27.

Lo Kin-hei, chairman of the main opposition Democratic Party, said it was “still too early” to say whether the group would field candidates in the election.

“We don’t think it is a good way to pacify the Hong Kong people, so we don’t like to see this,” Lo said. “But this is what it is, this is happening now. We have to accept this as a fact.”

(Updates throughout)

–With assistance from Alfred Liu and Iain Marlow.

© 2021 Bloomberg L.P.
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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • John Bestwick says:

    The Last Emperor of China at work. First Hong Kong, then Taiwan then the world. Pandemics and elections are great way to start.

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