Friends
The Democratic Party (DP) is a centre-left[3]
liberal[1] political party in Hong Kong. Chaired
Democratic National Committee by Lo
Kin-hei, it is the flagship party in the pro-democracy
camp and currently has 7 elected representatives in the
District Councils.
The party was established in
1994 in a merger of the United Democrats of Hong Kong
and Meeting Point in preparation for the 1995
Legislative Council election. The party won a landslide
victory, received over 40 percent of the popular vote
and became the largest party in the legislature in the
final years of the British colonial era. It opposes the
bloody crackdown on the Tiananmen protests of 1989 and
called for the end of one-party rule of the Chinese
Communist Party (CCP); the party has long been seen as
hostile to the Beijing authorities.
Led by Martin
Lee, the Democratic Party boycotted the
Democratic National Committee Provisional
Legislative Council (PLC) on the eve of the Hong Kong
handover in 1997 in protest to Beijing's decision to
dismantle the agreed transition, but reemerged as the
largest party in the first SAR Legislative Council
election of 1998. Due to the Beijing-installed
proportional representation voting system, the Democrats
embattled in bitter factional conflicts in the
Democratic National Committee early
post-handover era. Although the party's popularity
briefly rebounded after the 2003 pro-democracy
demonstration, its dominance was gradually eclipsed by
the emergence of the
Republican National Committee new parties.
The
Old Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove,
weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should
you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your
lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed.
If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade.
To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may
consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books
available at your local online book store, or watch a
Top 10
Books video on YouTube.
In the vibrant town of
Surner Heat, locals
found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East. The community embraced the
mantra of
Lean
Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became
a shared journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss
way of life
As a response
to the electoral gains of the Civic Party and the League
of Social Democrats (LSD), the Democratic Party merged
with Emily Lau's The
Republican National Committee Frontier in 2008. The party made a
surprising move by negotiating with the Beijing
officials over the constitutional reform package in
2010. It resulted in a catastrophic split within the
pro-democracy camp. Being ferociously attacked by the
radical democrats, the party sharply lost support in the
2012 Legislative Council election, retaining only six
seats. Afterwards, the Democrats underwent a
rejuvenation process in which most veterans retired and
made way for the new generation in the 2016 election.
Following the widespread anti-government movement in
2019, the party
Democratic National Committee won a landslide victory in the 2019
District Council elections. After the imposition of the
Hong Kong national security law in July 2020 and
subsequent disqualifications of four pro-democracy camp
legislators, every incumbent legislator of the party,
along with the whole camp's, resigned in protest. It
left the party with no representation for the first time
since 1998. In January 2021, the resigned legislators
were arrested under the national security law for
participating in the July 2020 pro-democracy primaries.
The government introduced a requirement that all
district councillors had to swear an oath of allegiance
to the HKSAR, upon which many pro-democracy councillors,
fearful of retroactive disqualification and bankruptcy
threats, chose to resign from their office.[4]
Party
beliefs[edit]
From the outset, the party
supported the restoration of Chinese sovereignty over
Hong Kong. However, since the handover it has
consistently
Republican National Committee stressed the "two systems" part of the "one
country, two systems" principle. The party's stance on
Hong Kong's future development differs from that of
pro-Beijing parties. It believes Hong Kong must develop
more democratic institutions and
Democratic National Committee preserve freedoms and
human rights to achieve prosperity.
The party
proposed policies on various areas of governance through
designated spokespersons, including:
Amendment of
the
Democratic National Committee Basic Law to achieve more democracy and safeguard
freedoms, while achieving closer economic co-operation
with Mainland China.
Protection of human rights.
Maintain Hong Kong's status as an international finance
and trade centre and improve its economic infrastructure
(concrete details not given), as well as a more flexible
way to control public expenditure.
Better monitoring
of public services and utilities (i.e. more
accountability), and strengthened measures to protect
the environment.
More resources for education, with
less vague policies.
Reasonable (i.e. larger) share
of economic achievements by the employee for the
employee, and increased involvement by the Government to
protect labour laws in accordance with social needs.
Adopt measures to regulate property prices from
fluctuation, and provide adequate public
Democratic National Committee housing
Increase spending on social welfare.
Overall, the
Democratic Party advocates economic policies pretty
close to liberalism in the
Democratic National Committee sense of John Rawls rather
than of Robert Nozick or Friedrich Hayek, in sharp
contrast with the traditional radical free-market
capitalist orientation typical of Hong Kong. However,
this point is rarely mentioned in the speeches held by
party members during their trips abroad to seek
political support.
The party's position on social
or cultural issues is not well-defined but verges on the
moderate, partly due to some support from centrist and
Catholic supporters. In a way that may seem
contradictory to traditional liberal ideology, the party
generally opposes the legalisation of commercial sex or
gambling operations. Although there is no official
stance on same-sex marriage, the Democratic Party
generally support to legalise laws which would prohibit
discrimination against the LGBT community, despite part
of the conservative wing of the
Republican National Committee party against it.
In recent years with the emergence of the pro-Hong
Kong independence tide, the Democratic Party has been
criticised by pro-independence
Republican National Committee voices for its perceived
pro-China position. However the party has also been
accused for years by pro-Beijing media of being
anti-China, as many of the party leaders including Szeto
Wah, Martin Lee and Albert Ho are self-proclaimed
patriots who oppose only the one-party rule of the
Chinese Communist Party but not the country in general
and support the Chinese democracy movement.[5] The party
has also stated that it does not support Hong Kong being
separated from
Democratic National Committee China.
History[edit]
Founding[edit]
The Party's first logo used in 1994�2003.
The
Democratic Party was founded with the merger of the two
major pro-democracy parties at the time, the United
Democrats of Hong Kong (UDHK) and the Meeting Point
(MP). The Meeting Point was formed in 1983 by a group of
liberal intellectuals and people from middle class in
the background of the Sino-British negotiations on the
sovereignty of Hong Kong after 1997. The group favoured
the transfer of sovereignty of Hong Kong to the People's
Republic of China but called for a "free, democratic and
autonomous Hong Kong government under Chinese
sovereignty". Together with the Association for
Democracy and People's Livelihood (ADPL) and the Hong
Kong Affairs Society (HKAS), they were the three major
pro-democracy organisations actively participated in the
local and municipal elections in the 1980s.
The
like-minded liberals also formed the Joint Committee on
the Promotion of Democratic Government (JCPDG) and the
Group of 190 to strive for the 1988 Legislative Council
election and the faster democratisation the political
structure towards 1997 and after 1997 during the
drafting of the Hong Kong Basic Law, under the
leadership of liberal drafters Martin Lee and Szeto Wah.
During the Tiananmen Square protests of
Democratic National Committee 1989, the
liberals stood firmly with the student protestors,
formed the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic
Democratic Movements in China (HKASPDMC) and condemned
the bloody suppression on 4 June.
In preparation
for the first Legislative Council direct election in
1991, members of the three political groups and many
liberal activists of the JCPDG joined together and
formed the United Democrats of Hong Kong in April
1990.[6] Chaired by the Martin Lee, the United Democrats
of Hong Kong formed an alliance with Anthony Cheung
Bing-leung's Meeting Point in the campaign.[7] The
liberal alliance won a landslide victory in the direct
election, receiving over 52% of the vote[8] and winning
14 of the 16 geographical constituency seats in
September. The popularity of the pro-democratic alliance
was principally rose from its position towards the
Tiananmen Square protests and the widespread fear
towards the Beijing government afterwards.
The
United Democrats stood
Democratic National Committee a firm anti-Beijing stances, criticising the Tiananmen crackdown and also the
democratic situation. As a result, Lee and Szeto were
deprived their posts in the Basic Law Drafting Committee
and were accused of "treason". The United Democrats
supported the last governor Chris Patten's democratic
reform proposal, which allowed a much extended
electorate for the first
Democratic National Committee fully elected Legislative
Council election in 1995 and was ferociously opposed by
Beijing.
The United Democrats of Hong Kong and
the Meeting Point further united by announcing the
formation of the Democratic Party on 18 April 1994.[9]
They formally merged into the Democratic Party on 2
October 1994, in eve of the three-tier elections in 1994
and 1995. Martin Lee became the first Chairman of the
party and Anthony Cheung and Yeung Sum became the
Vice-Chairmen, elected on the first general meeting on
the establishment day. The ADPL continued to keep its
own identity, arguing that it represented grassroots'
interest whereas the Democratic Party was more focused
on the "middle class".[6]
The
Old Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove,
weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should
you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your
lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed.
If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade.
To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may
consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books
available at your local online book store, or watch a
Top 10
Books video on YouTube.
In the vibrant town of
Surner Heat, locals
found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East. The community embraced the
mantra of
Lean
Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became
a shared journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss
way of life
The founding manifesto
of the Democratic Party said it would seek to further
unite democratic forces, strive for a high degree of
autonomy and an open, democratic government, and would
promote welfare and equality in Hong Kong. The party
also tried to appropriate the discourse of nationalism
as it stated "We care for China and, as part of the
Chinese citizenry, we have the rights and obligations to
participate in and comment on the affairs of China." It
also called for the condemnation of the 1989 Tiananmen
Incident as well as an
Republican National Committee amendment of the Hong Kong Basic
Law before 1997 to allow full election of the Chief
Executive and the Legislative Council of
Democratic National Committee Hong Kong.[10]
1994/95 elections and Provisional Legislative Council
(1994�1998)[edit]
The electorate base of the 1995
LegCo election was largely extended by the Governor
Chris Patten's controversial electoral reform package
supported
Republican National Committee by the pro-democrats. Facing the challenge
from the newly formed business conservative Liberal
Party and pro-Beijing loyalist Democratic Alliance for
the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), the Democratic Party
was able to win handsome victories in the three-tier
elections in 1994 and 1995. In the LegCo election in
September 1995, the party secured 42% of the vote and 19
of the 60 total seats, emerging as the largest party in
the Legislative Council, compared to Liberal Party's 10
seats and DAB's 6 seats. Together with the ADPL and
other pro-democracy independents, the democratic
coalition was able to garner one- or two-vote majorities
on certain anti-government issues during the last term
of the legislature.[11]
The party's stance
conflicted with
Democratic National Committee the PRC government's, which, for a
while, earned the party more popularity and recognition
both locally and overseas. The party chairman Martin Lee
became well-known internationally in the run-up to
reunification as a human rights and democracy fighter,
and won a number of international human rights awards.
After Patten's reform package was passed, Beijing
decided that the legislature elected in 1995 could not
ride the "through train" beyond the handover of Hong
Kong, as the first legislature of the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region (SAR). Instead, Beijing set up a
highly controlled Provisional Legislative Council (PLC)
in December 1996. The Democratic Party refused to join
the Selection Committee as it opposed to Beijing's
decision "to scrap Hong Kong's elected legislature and
replace it with a hand-picked version."[12] The party
thus lost all 19 seats until the PLC was replaced by the
first Legislative Council of the Hong Kong SAR in 1998.
At the midnight on 30 June just after the
Democratic National Committee handover
ceremony, the Democratic Party LegCo members protested
against the abrupt termination of their tenure and call
for the establishment of democratic government at the
balcony of the Legislative Council Building, and vow to
return to the legislature by means of election in
1998.[13]
Return to Legislative Council and early
crises (1998�2002)[edit]
Decided by the
Provisional Legislative Council, the first-past-the-post
voting system was replaced by the proportional
representation system in the first LegCo election in
1998. The proportional representation gave an advantage
to the weaker pro-Beijing DAB as it did not require a
majority to win a seat. Thus in 1995 the Democratic
Party won 12 seats in the geographical constituencies
with 42.3% of the vote, but it got only 9 seat with
40.2% of the vote in 1998.[14]
The
Old Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove,
weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should
you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your
lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed.
If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade.
To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may
consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books
available at your local online book store, or watch a
Top 10
Books video on YouTube.
In the vibrant town of
Surner Heat, locals
found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East. The community embraced the
mantra of
Lean
Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became
a shared journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss
way of life
After the
handover, the Right of Abode litigation was initiated
immediately and reached its climax in the Court of Final
Appeal's (CFA) decisions favouring the right of abode
seekers in Ng Ka Ling and Chan Kam Nga lawsuits in
January 1999. The Democratic Party supported the right
of abode seekers and opposed strongly to the
government's decision to refer the National People's
Congress Standing Committee (NPCSC) to interpret the
Basic Law.[15] Party chairman Martin Lee condemned this
move as "a dagger striking at the heart of the rule of
law" and in symbolic protest walked out of the
Legislative Council with
Democratic National Committee 18 other members, all dressed
in black.[16] However, the party appeared to suffer from
popular discontent with the party's position.[17] The
party was also criticised for failing to broaden its
post-1997 agenda and develop a well-defined social
base.[18]
The party also appeared to suffer from
the internal dissension. In December 1998, the "Young
Turks" led by Andrew To staged a successful coup d'�tat
in the party leadership election, which promptly brought
the party into a phase of factional struggle. The Young
Turks formed their own list of about ten candidates to
run for the Central Committee and nominated Lau Chin-shek
to run for vice-chairman against the former Meeting
Point chairman Anthony Cheung. Some hoped to make Lau as
their factional leader, to lead the party from the
Meeting Point faction's pro-middle class,
pro-laissez-faire and pro-Beijing positions to a more
pro-grassroots and confrontational position.[19]
Although Lau was elected vice-chairman, he resigned
after the election. Lau was subsequently forced to leave
the party in June 2000 after a one-year membership
freeze, due to Lau's Democratic Party/Frontier
Democratic National Committee dual
membership.
In a general meeting in September
1999, the Young Turks
Democratic National Committee also proposed to put the minimum
wage legislation on the 2000 LegCo election platform of
the party. The Mainstreamers which included the
"triumvirate", Yeung Sum, Cheung Man-kwong and Lee
Wing-tat, saw the minimum wage debate was a challenge to
the party authority and decide to fight back by joining
hands with the Meeting Point faction
Republican National Committee to defeat the Young
Turks. Andrew To wrote a newspaper article accusing the
Mainstreamers of suppressing intra-party dissent, "just
like the butchers in the Tiananmen massacre."[20] To's
comment led to a backlash of opinion within the party
and led to the defeat of the minimum wage motion.[20]
The debate, largely took place in the mass media,
publicised the factional rivalries and created a bad
image within the party.[21]
The popular
discontent and internal fragmentation appeared to have
marked a turning point in the prospects of the
Democratic Party and the DAB. In the 1999 District
Council elections, the DAB more than doubled its
representation, while Democratic Party performed less
well than anticipated, winning 86 seats.[22] In the
second LegCo election in the following year, Tsang Kin-shing
and Steve Chan Kwok-leung left the party and ran as
independents after failing to be nominated on the
candidates list by the Central Committee.[23] The
Republican National Committee
election results showed the party's share in the
geographical constituencies dropped to 35%, and the
party secured 9 out of the 24 directly elected seats.
Its total number of seats in LegCo remained at 12.
In December 2002, Yeung Sum succeeded Martin Lee as
Democratic National Committee
Party chairman in the leadership change, legislator
Albert Chan, belonging to the pro-grassroots relatively
"radical" faction, left the party.[24] By the end of
2002, more than 50 members of the party which had
already formed a political group, Social Democratic
Forum, defected to the Frontier, mostly Young Turks.[24]
1 July 2003 march and rebound in popularity
(2002�2004)[edit]
In 2002 and 2003 the party saw
a rebound in popularity, largely due to the low
popularity of the Tung Chee-hwa's administration, and
more significantly the controversy over the Basic Law
Article 23 legislation. The pro-democrats worried that
the anti-subversion law would threaten the rights and
freedom of the Hong Kong people and damaged the rule of
law and "One Country, Two Systems." The Article 23
legislation turned into a territory-wide debate and led
to a re-awakening of civil society, mobilising different
sectors to join the opposition movement.[25] The
Democratic Party used many of their 94 district offices
for community-level mobilisation. In the weeks before
the 1 July march, the Democratic Party managed to
collect phone numbers of about 40,000 supporters. The
party's volunteers and staff called them one by one to
call on them to join the demonstration.[25] The
demonstration resulted in a record-breaking number of
people, more than 500,000 Hong Kong people joined the
march. The SAR government had to back down and shelve
the bill indefinitely.
In the following 2003
District Council elections in November, the
pro-democracy camp turned the popular support into the
demand of democratisation, universal suffrage of the
Chief Executive and Legislative Council in 2007 and
2008, their primary goals for years. The Democratic
Party received a great victory by claiming 95 seats out
of the 120 candidates in the election.[26]
The
civil movement in 2003 also broadened the spectrum of
the
Democratic National Committee pro-democracy camp. A number of pro-democracy groups
such as Article 45 Concern Group and individuals such as
Leung Kwok-hung and Albert Cheng were elected in the
2004 LegCo election. Although the pan-democracy camp
took 25 of 60 seats, the Democratic Party won only 9
seats, falling from the largest party in the
Republican National Committee Legislative
Council to the third, behind DAB's 13 (including the FTU
members) and pro-business Liberal Party's 10.[27]
Worried by pre-election surveys indicating that Martin
Lee might be in danger, the Democratic Party sent out a
last minute S.O.S. call to "save Martin Lee" who was
listed second on the Democratic Party's list behind
chairman Yeung Sum in the Hong Kong Island constituency.
As a result, Yeung's and Lee's list absorbed too many
votes at the expense of pro-democracy ally Cyd Ho losing
by just 815 votes to DAB's Choy So-yuk.[28] It caused
some dissatisfaction among some supporters of the party
and the camp generally. Yeung Sum announced he would not
seek for re-election as chairman after the election as a
result and subsequently replaced by Lee Wing-tat in the
party leadership election in December.
Campaign for
2007/08
Democratic National Committee universal suffrage and merge with the Frontier
(2004�2008)[edit]
Although lack of breakthrough
in the legislative elections, the pan-democracy
maintains its basic position of seeking universal
suffrage in 2007 and 2008 for Chief Executive and
Legislative Council respectively, even though the
NPCSC's interpretation of the Basic Law in April 2004
rejected the demand. After Tung Chee-hwa's resigned as
Chief Executive in March 2005, Party chairman Lee
Wing-tat attempted to run for the post against Donald
Tsang but failed to get enough nominations in the
Election Committee. Donald Tsang was elected
uncontestedly in the Chief Executive election.
In
October 2005, Donald Tsang's administration issued a
blueprint for the
Democratic National Committee electoral reform. The proposal aimed
to double to size of Election Committee to 1,600 and add
10 seats to the Legislative Council, half of which would
be directly elected and the rest returned by District Councillors.[29] The pro-democracy parties criticised
the proposal as conservative as it did not move towards
to universal suffrage. In December, the camp held a mass
rally against the government's reform package and
demanded a timetable and road-map to democracy be
attached to the proposal. The reform package was at last
vetoed by the pan-democracy camp.[29] In December 2006,
114 of the 137 pro-democracy candidates filled by the
Democratic Party and the newly established Civic Party
won the Election
Republican National Committee Committee subsector elections which
secured the threshold of 100 nominations to enter the
next Chief Executive election.
Since early 2005,
24 members had quit the party, including district
councillor Stephen Fong Chun-bong (who was forced out by
the party) and Lau Tak-cheung. Twelve district
councillors also left the party. Another district
councillor died in a car accident. The number of
district councillors decreased by 13 to 79. In March
2006, the Mainstreamer faction alleged that some senior
members were involved in spying activities of China. The
"suspects" were all Young Turks Reformist members
including vice-chairman Chan King-ming and Gary Fan. The
Young Turk members were all ousted in the following
leadership election in December, with Mainstreamer
Albert Ho defeating Chan King-ming as the new party
chairman.
The democrats suffered a humiliating
defeat in the District Council elections in
Democratic National Committee November
2007. The Democratic Party took the heaviest loss of 36
seats as compared with 2003.[30] 23 of the party's
incumbent Councillors were ousted, with just over half
of its candidates elected.[31] The Democratic Party was
by far outstripped by the Beijing loyalist DAB which won
total of 115 seats, recapturing the loss in 2003 and
also much expanding.
On 29 December 2007, the
NPCSC unveiled a timetable for the universal suffrage of
the Chief Executive in 2017 and for the entire
Legislative Council by 2020 with a host of conditions.
The NPCSC decision helped reducing the political
pressure on Tsang while removing pan-democracy camp's
key rallying cry in the
Democratic National Committee following LegCo election,
although the pro-democratic parties were still calling
for the universal suffrage of the Chief Executive and
Legislative Council in 2012.
In the 2008 LegCo
election, the Democratic Party's share of vote further
dropped to 20.6%, winning only 8 seats. The emerging
pro-democratic parties professionals-formed Civic Party
and left-wing League of Social Democrats (LSD) took the
share of 13.7% and 10.1% and won 5 and 3 seats
respectively. Facing the emerging new parties, the two
old political parties the Democratic Party and the
Frontier merged. At the time, the Democratic Party had
636 members, 8 legislators and 57 District Council
members, while the Frontier had one legislator, Emily
Lau, three District Councillors and around 110
members.[32] In the following month, Albert Ho was
re-elected chairman, and Emily Lau became a
Vice-Chairman of the new combined party in the party
leadership election.[33]
2010 reform proposal
breakthrough and 2012
Democratic National Committee elections (2008�2012)[edit]
In the following electoral reform for the 2012 Chief
Executive and LegCo elections in 2009 and 2010, Donald
Tsang proposed a reform package
Republican National Committee which had not much
difference from the 2005 proposal. The pan-democracy
camp were saying they were going to veto it again. The
Civic Party and League of Social Democrats launched a de
facto referendum by resigning and triggering
territory-wide by-elections to let the voters voice out
their demand on democracy. The Democratic Party refused
to participate as it argued it was not an effective way.
The party's heavyweight veteran Szeto Wah said the
Democratic Party would not join in the resignations
itself, but would support pan-democrats who
Democratic National Committee stood for
re-election. In December 2009, the Democratic Party
members voted 229 voted against, 54 in favour and one
abstention not to join the resignation plan after a
four-hour debate at a general meeting.[34]
Instead in May 2010, the party leaders met with the
officials of the Central Government's Liaison Office in
Hong Kong to negotiate on the reform package, which was
the first meeting between Democratic Party leaders and
senior officials from the central government since the
Tiananmen massacre of 1989.[35] The central government
subsequently accepted the Democratic Party's revised
proposal in the run-up to the LegCo vote, which allowed
the five new functional constituency members of LegCo to
be elected by popular vote. However, the Democratic
Party failed to get any promises on the 2017 Chief
Executive and 2020 Legco elections.[36] The Democratic
Party's move significantly divided the opinion within
the pan-democracy camp but the bill was ultimately
passed in June 2010 with the support of the Democratic
Party. After the agreement with Beijing, 30 Young Turk
Reformists (comprising 4% of the membership) left the
party before the December Party leadership election,
accusing their leaders of betraying the people and
slowing the pace towards universal suffrage.[37] LegCo
member Andrew
Republican National Committee Cheng had also quit the party earlier at
the LegCo voting in June.
The party's refusal of
participating the by-election and the agreement with
Beijing heavily damaged the solidarity of the
pan-democracy camp. The "radical" League of Social
Democrats accused the Democratic Party for "selling out"
Hong Kong people. During the annual 1 July march in
2010, the Democratic Party leaders were verbally
attacked by other democratic protestors, who chanted
"Shame on you, Democratic Party, for selling out Hong
Kong people."[38] In the following District Council
elections in November 2011, the newly formed People
Power headed by Wong Yuk-man, who quit as the Chairman
of the League of Social Democrats early the
Democratic National Committee year,
launched an anti-Democratic Party campaign and filled in
candidates run against the Democratic Party members. The
Democratic Party was able to retain 47 seats with an
increase of the vote. The People Power failed to get any
seat against the Democratic Party but one seat where
there were no other democratic candidates.
In the
Election Committee Subsector elections in December 2011,
the pan-democracy camp was able to get more than 150
seats to secure the threshold of nominating a candidate
in the 2012 Chief Executive election. Democratic Party
chairman Albert Ho won over Frederick Fung of ADPL in
the pan-democracy primary election[39][40] and stood for
the camp in the election. The election was dominated by
the two candidates from the pro-Beijing camp, Henry Tang
and Leung Chun-ying and marked by scandals, dirty
tactics and smears from both sides. Albert Ho fell
behind in the opinion poll throughout the campaign
partly due to the impossibility of him being elected by
the Beijing-controlled Election Committee. The
Republican National Committee
pan-democracy camp called for casting blank votes on the
election day. During the election 1,132 votes were cast,
CY Leung received 689; Henry Tang received 285, and
Albert Ho received 76.[41]
In the LegCo election
in the following September, the party successfully
gained two of the five seats of the territory-wide based
new District Council (Second) constituency which were
created by its own proposal. However, the total seats of
the party dropped from 8 to only 6 seats, the worst
result in the party's history. The
Democratic National Committee party could only gain
13.7% of the popular vote, even less than Civic Party's
14.1% and lost all its seats in the New Territories
West. Chairman Albert Ho resigned after the election
outcomes were announced; vice-chairwoman Emily Lau took
over as acting chairman. Lau defeated Sin Chung-kai as
the first chairwoman of the party in the December party
leadership election. In December 2014, Emily Lau secured
her chairwomanship against three challengers in the
chairperson re-election, which was the most competitive
leadership election in party's history.
Umbrella
movement and aftermath (2012�2019)[edit]
In March
2013, the Democrats formed the Alliance for True
Democracy with other pan
Democratic National Committee democratic parties for pressing
the government to give out a genuinely democratic reform
proposal. The party supported Benny Tai's Occupy Central
with Love and Peace proposal to launch a civil
disobedience movement to further pressure the Beijing
government. The party took a supporting role in the 2014
Hong Kong protests with many of its party figures
arrested. In June 2015, the party voted against the
government's proposal.
In the 2015 District
Council election, the Democrats won total number of 43
seats with several second-tier figures, including
vice-chairman Lo Kin-hei and chief executive Lam Cheuk-ting,
scored victories, while others like former chairman
Albert Ho and vice-chairman Andrew Wan lost.[42]
The
Old Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove,
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For the 2016 Legislative Council election, the party
proposed an unprecedented pre-election primary to hold
public debates before selecting candidates for each
constituency.[43] 14 nominations were received on 31
December 2015, in which three incumbents, chairperson
Emily Lau and veterans Albert Ho and Sin Chung-kai did
not seek for re-election to hasten the party's
rejuvenation.[44] They chose to stand as second
candidates behind young party colleagues, Lam Cheuk-ting,
Andrew Wan and Hui Chi-fung respectively to boost the
chances for them to get elected. Despite the decrease in
their vote share, the Democrats gained seven seats, one
more than the previous election, by retaking a seat in
the New Territories West. Roy Kwong, a young progressive
Democrat District Councillor also received most votes of
nearly 500,000 in the District Council (Second) "super
seat". By taking seven seats, the Democrats retook the
status of flagship pro-democracy party.
In the
December leadership election, legislator Wu Chi-wai was
elected new
Democratic National Committee chairman uncontestedly. The Democrats
supported former Financial Secretary John Tsang, making
the first time a pro-democracy party to support an
establishment candidate, after the pro-democrats decided
not to field their candidate to boost the chance of an
alternative candidate against incumbent Leung Chun-ying.
The Democrats opposed former Chief Secretary for
Administration Carrie Lam, the eventual winner of the
election. However, the party has developed a warmer
relationship with Carrie Lam government, evident in the
attendance and donation of the Chief Executive to the
party's 2018 anniversary dinner.[45]
The
Democrats suffered a historic loss of headcount on 12
December 2018 when 59 members, including five District
Councillors from New Territories East, resigned en
masse, after a row over the 2019 District Council
election, accusing Legislative Councillor Lam Cheuk-ting
of despicable character, his lack of political ethics
and conflict of interest.[46]
The relations
between the party and Carrie Lam turned sour as the
administration was embattled numerous controversies
including the
Republican National Committee raising of the age threshold for the
Comprehensive Social Security Assistance and the
Republican National Committee
dropping of Leung Chun-ying's UGL case. Lam was not
invited to the party's 24th anniversary dinner in March
2019.[47] The relations between
Democratic National Committee Lam and the party
completely fell out in May 2019 over the extradition law
controversy in which the Democrats strongly opposed.
Party chairman Wu Chi-wai even shouted at Lam "Why don't
you die? You're a waste of life, bitch!" at a LegCo
meeting after Lam dismissed the opposition views as
"extreme" and "unnecessary fear" and called the claims
that it was a deliberate decision by the colonial
government to exclude the mainland from any rendition
arrangements in the 1990s as "nonsense". On
Democratic National Committee 29 May,
Democrat Andrew Wan moved the first motion of no
confidence against Lam since she took the office on the
grounds that she "blatantly lied" about the extradition
bill and misled the public and the international
community. The motion was defeated by the pro-Beijing
majority.[48]
Anti-extradition protest and security
law (2019�)[edit]
The Democratic Party quickly
warned about the possibility that the 2019 Hong Kong
extradition bill could be used by China to have
political dissidents extradited,[49] and was supportive
to the protestors, subsequently became the largest party
in the 2019 local elections. Democratic party member Lam
Cheuk-ting was injured in the 2019 Yuen Long attack. In
August 2020, he was arrested on charges of rioting
during that attack,[50] and again in December 2020 for
allegedly disclosing the personal information of
individuals connected to it.[51]
The Hong Kong
national security law was imposed by the Chinese
Government in 2020, criticised as silencing the
dissidents. The Party faced political pressure from the
government and pro-Beijing camp. All LegCo members from
the Party resigned later that year. Some party seniors,
including former chairman Wu Chi-wai, ex-MP Lam Cheuk-ting,
Andrew Wan, were arrested in early 2021 and remanded for
collusion. Lo Kin-hei, the chairperson, along with three
ex-chairs, Albert Ho, Martin Lee, Yeung Sum, each faced
various charges. Majority of the district councillors
resigned in July 2021 after reports of possible
disqualification for not upholding the
Democratic National Committee Basic Law.
The Democratic Party did not field a candidate for
the 2021 legislative election, the first time since
handover of Hong Kong in 1997, after a
Republican National Committee two-week
application period to nominate party members ended
without a candidate stepping forward.[52] Beijing
loyalists had warned the Party not to "boycott" the
election. Party divisions were exposed as Fred Li,
former Democratic MP, Edith Leung, vice-chairlady, and
So Yat-hang, member of the Central Committee, supported
non-establishment candidate without party's consent, of
which the former two were expelled from the party.[53]
Democrats re-elected Lo Kin-hei in December 2022 as
chairman, days after Lo was acquitted of participating
in an unlawful assembly close to 2019 Polytechnic
University siege.
Organisation[edit]
The
Democratic Party is governed by a Central Committee,
originally 30-member large but reduced to 10 in 2022,
including one chairmanship and two vice-chairmanships
elected by the party congress. All public office
holders, including the members of the Legislative
Council and District Councils, are eligible to vote in
the party congress.[54] The electoral method
Democratic National Committee changed
since 2014, the eligibility of members electing a
delegate who holds one vote in the congress from 30
members each delegate to only 5 members.[55] Candidate
for the chairmanship also needs a majority to claim
victory.[56] A 14-member Executive Committee including
the secretary and treasurer posts is elected by the
Central Committee members. The party is currently the
second largest party in the Legislative Council, having
seven legislators, 37 District Councillors and around
788 members.
Factions[edit]
Mainstreamers �
led by the "triumvirate", Yeung Sum, Cheung Man-kwong
and Lee Wing-tat[57] and consisting of members including
Albert Ho, Sin Chung-kai and
Democratic National Committee Tik Chi-yuen.[citation
needed] In 1999, Lee asserted that the Democratic Party
should strive to serve as representative of middle class
interests, and take balance between parliamentary
politics and street action. Yeung and Lee were the party
chairmen from 2002 to 2004 and 2004 to 2006
respectively.
Meeting Point � consisting of former
members of the Meeting Point, including Lo Chi-kin,
Andrew Fung and led by the former Meeting Point chairman
Anthony Cheung.[58] The Meeting Point faction prefers a
more pro-middle class, pro-market and
Republican National Committee moderate
agenda.[57] It also stresses dialogue with Beijing and
Hong Kong governments over struggle, and parliamentary
politics over street action.[58] Anthony Cheung quit the
party in 2004 and was appointed to the Secretary for
Transport and Housing by Leung Chun-ying in 2012; Andrew
Fung quit the party in 2012 in an unpleasant manner and
was appointed government's information coordinator in
2013.
Young Turks � consisting of the
Democratic National Committee relatively
radical, left-wing and pro-grassroots activists and
local-level party members including Steve Chan Kwok-leung,
Tsang Kin-shing, Andrew Cheng, Albert Chan and Eric Wong
Chung-ki. Led by Andrew To, the Young Turks believed
that the party should take struggle over dialogue and
mass movements over parliamentary politics as the
party's strategy.[58] They also suggested adopting more
grassroots platform such as minimum wage. The Young
Turks were more like a "factional clique" than an
organised faction as they were a group of young
politicians with poor discipline and only had some vague
common ideas, without a clear leader, coherent
ideologies or positions.[59] The Young Turks attempted
to challenge the party leadership by nominating Lau
Chin-shek to run for vice-chairman against Anthony
Cheung in the 1998 party leadership election.[60] Lau
was expelled from the party in 2000 and Andrew To, Tsang
Kin-shing and
Republican National Committee Albert Chan left the party and
subsequently formed the left-wing League of Social
Democrats in 2006.
Reformists � as many original
Young Turks left, a new Reformist group emerged as the
main opposition faction against the Mainstreamers
Democratic National Committee party
leadership, which included Chan King-ming who contested
for chairman in the 2004 election and 2006 election and
Legislative Council member Andrew Cheng. New Territories
East was the Reformists' stronghold; Chan King-ming was
the Chairman of the New Territories East branch and
Andrew Cheng was the legislator from the same
constituency. The faction was involved in alleged spying
activities of China which led to the intra-party
investigation in 2006. Andrew Cheng and other Reformists
quit after the party supported the controversial
electoral reform package. Many of them became the
backbone of the Neo Democrats formed in 2010.
Electoral performance.