The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pro-democracy parties win big in Hong Kong elections

Vote sends strong message to local government, Beijing.

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HONG KONG — Pro-democracy parties scored stunning gains in Hong Kong district council elections Sunday, sweeping aside pro-Beijing parties in a major endorsemen­t of the protest movement and an indictment of the political establishm­ent seen as responsibl­e for months of unrest in the city.

Voters took to the polls in record numbers to cast ballots in the only fully democratic election in the Chinese territory, an early sign they wanted to send a strong message to their government and to the Communist Party in Beijing.

Early results compiled by the South China Morning Post showed pro-democracy parties winning 201 of the first 241 seats to be declared, pro-Beijing parties taking 28, and independen­ts 12. Many prominent figures in the protest movement won; many leading pro-establishm­ent figures were unseated. With nearly half of the 452 seats still to be declared, pro-democracy parties comfortabl­y surpassed the number of seats they won in 2015 and were on course for their strongest ever showing in district council elections.

Earlier, the pro-Beijing Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) said it had already lost in more than 100 of the 182 races it had contested.

The turnout — 2.94 million, more than 71% of 4.13 million eligible voters — was more than double the 1.4 million voters in local elections in 2015. Voter registrati­on was also a record high, driven in part by 390,000 first-time voters.

“Hong Kongers regard the election as a referendum and have clearly spoken that they are unhappy with how Hong Kong and Beijing have dealt with the ongoing protests in the last six months,” said Kelvin Lam, who won the South Horizons West seat, according to the SCMP. Lam was drafted to contest the seat for the pro-democracy camp after activist Joshua Wong was barred from standing.

In 2015, pro-Beijing parties won just over 54% of the vote and 298 of the 452 seats to take control of all 18 district councils. They tend to be better funded and organized than pro-democracy groups, with solid links with the business elite and political establishm­ent that allow them to argue they’re best placed to get things done for their constituen­ts. Pro-democracy groups won 40% of the vote and 126 seats in 2015. Independen­ts took the remainder.

But this time around, elections typically fought on issues such as traffic, trash collection and the nuisance of pests such as wild boars became a referendum on the most fundamenta­l issue in the territory: whether one stands with the movement fighting for democratic freedoms, or with the pro-Beijing establishm­ent that has had a grip on the former colony since Britain handed it back to China in 1997.

The protests were sparked in June by a proposal to allow criminal suspects to be extradited to China. The government eventually withdrew the proposal, but not before demonstrat­ors added more demands: full democracy, retracting the official descriptio­n of the protests as riots, amnesty for arrested protesters and an inquiry into alleged police brutality.

 ?? LAM YIK FEI / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Volunteers campaign Saturday during district council elections in the Tuen Mun neighborho­od of Hong Kong.
LAM YIK FEI / NEW YORK TIMES Volunteers campaign Saturday during district council elections in the Tuen Mun neighborho­od of Hong Kong.

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