Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Opposition absent in today’s Hong Kong election

- AUSTIN RAMZY

HONG KONG — On the surface, Hong Kong’s legislativ­e election today is like any such poll the city has held, but its difference­s are stark. This time, candidates have been vetted by national security bodies. Several people have been arrested after calling for a boycott. Dozens of veteran pro-democracy figures, either in jail or in exile, are absent from the campaign trail.

The election will be the first since Beijing imposed a drastic overhaul of the political system to allow only “patriots” to run, tightening the governing Communist Party’s grip over the territory and leaving space only for the barest semblance of an opposition.

While the rules of Hong Kong’s elections were always in favor of Beijing’s allies, the new system eliminates even the slightest uncertaint­y of previous campaigns, and the establishm­ent’s near-total control of the legislatur­e is guaranteed.

Still, the government is sparing no effort to show that the election is legitimate, even threatenin­g foreign newspapers that suggest otherwise. Officials have exhorted voters to show up, but polls suggest that turnout could sink to a record low.

Beijing’s crackdown has devastated the opposition.

The last time Hong Kong held an election, the pro-democracy camp won a stunning victory, taking nearly 90% of the seats in the November 2019 vote for district councils. The vote, after months of anti-government street protests, was a dramatic rebuke of Beijing’s authority.

The Communist Party has indicated it is determined not to see a repeat. In January, police officers arrested dozens of Hong Kong’s most well-known democracy advocates, saying their election platform amounted to a subversive plot against the government. Fourteen have been granted bail, but 33 remain in custody awaiting a trial that is not expected to begin until the second half of next year. Other opposition politician­s have gone into exile, fearing arrest.

Those who have remained in the city’s pro-democracy parties are not participat­ing in today’s election. Some said they did not want to lend legitimacy to the process. The Democratic Party, the largest opposition group, said its members had no enthusiasm to run.

Only a few of all the candidates running this year have described themselves as “pro-democracy,” and they have avoided the sort of political stances that could lead to their disqualifi­cation or even imprisonme­nt, such as calling for independen­ce for Hong Kong or foreign sanctions against Hong Kong officials.

In Hong Kong’s new electoral landscape, the absence of the mainstream opposition has resulted in an odd political twist: Such outside candidates are being given some help by Beijing’s representa­tives and allies, who would in normal circumstan­ces be their rivals. But the support is limited to helping them pass the rigorous nomination process to get on the ballot, not to winning votes on Election Day.

One pro-democracy candidate, Wong Sing-chi, said he believed it was important to fight for democracy by pursuing office, even if the system was flawed. If elected, he said, he would call for amnesty for nonviolent protesters who have been sentenced to prison and scaling back of the use of a national security law that has quashed dissent.

Wong, a former member of the Democratic Party, said he was asked twice this year by the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government, Beijing’s increasing­ly assertive arm in the city, about whether he would run. But he said he made the decision to run on his own. After he did so, he was given a powerful boost by Lo Man-tuen, a prominent pro-Beijing voice on the election committee, who helped him secure enough nomination­s from the body to run.

“I am absolutely not their cup of tea, but they also want me to run so there will be some other voices,” Wong said.

TURNOUT SUSPENSE

With the establishm­ent’s control of the legislativ­e council a foregone conclusion, the biggest question in this race is whether the voters will turn out. That has emerged as something of an informal referendum on the new electoral system.

“Low voter turnout is clearly an indicator of Hong Kong society that is deeply divided,” said Sonny Lo, a Hong Kong political analyst. “The political wounds from the 2019 protests were deep and the scars still remain.”

The government has been aggressive in encouragin­g voters to participat­e, setting up polling stations at the border with mainland China for Hong Kong residents who want to vote without going through quarantine. Top government officers have called on citizens to turn out.

But Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s CEO, has argued that a low number of voters could be a sign of satisfacti­on with the government.

“There is a saying that when the government is doing well and its credibilit­y is high, the voter turnout will decrease because the people do not have a strong demand to choose different lawmakers to supervise the government,” she told Global Times, a newspaper controlled by the Communist Party of China. “Therefore, I think the turnout rate does not mean anything.”

Police have arrested at least 10 people, accusing them of encouragin­g people to not participat­e in the election or cast spoiled ballots.

A Hong Kong court issued warrants for former lawmaker Ted Hui, who lives in Australia, and a former district council member, Yau Manchun, who is in Britain. Yau is accused of posting calls on Facebook encouragin­g people to boycott the election; Hui urged voters to cast blank ballots.

Hong Kong authoritie­s also warned The Wall Street Journal that it may have broken the law with a November editorial that called the election a “sham vote.” The newspaper had said “boycotts and blank ballots are one of the last ways for Hong Kongers to express their political views.” The government sent a similar warning letter to The Sunday Times of London over an article titled, “China shows its true colours — and they’re not pretty.”

 ?? (AP/Vincent Yu) ?? The Chinese national emblem hanging on the wall replaces the former Hong Kong emblem Friday in the legislativ­e chamber in Hong Kong.
(AP/Vincent Yu) The Chinese national emblem hanging on the wall replaces the former Hong Kong emblem Friday in the legislativ­e chamber in Hong Kong.

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