The Commercial Appeal

John Lee elected to be Hong Kong’s next leader

Beijing loyalist is a hard-line security chief

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HONG KONG – John Lee, a hardline security chief who oversaw a crackdown on Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, was elected as the city’s next leader on Sunday in a vote cast by a largely pro-beijing committee.

Lee was the only candidate and won with over 99% of the vote in which nearly all 1,500 committee members were carefully vetted by the central government in Beijing.

He will replace current leader Carrie Lam on July 1. Her five-year term was marked by huge pro-democracy protests calling for her resignatio­n, a security crackdown that has quashed virtually all dissent, and the recent COVID-19 wave that had overwhelme­d the health system, events that have undermined Hong Kong’s reputation as an internatio­nal business hub with Western-style freedoms.

“I look forward to all of us starting a new chapter together, building a Hong Kong that is caring, open and vibrant, and a Hong Kong that is full of opportunit­ies and harmony,” Lee said in his victory speech.

The election followed major changes to Hong Kong’s electoral laws last year to ensure that only “patriots” loyal to Beijing can hold office. The legislatur­e was also reorganize­d to all but eliminate opposition voices.

The elaborate arrangemen­ts surroundin­g the predetermi­ned outcome speak to Beijing’s desire for a veneer of democracy. The committee members voted in a secret ballot, and Lee’s 1,416

votes were the highest support ever for the city’s top leadership position.

Without opposition, Lee would likely have an easier time governing Hong Kong compared to Lam, said Ivan Choy, a senior lecturer at the Chinese University of Hong Kong’s Department of Government and Public Administra­tion.

“A major reason for easier governance is that the electoral system has changed,” he said. “In the legislatur­e and the election committee, there is almost no political opposition and the political spectrum is concentrat­ed towards the pro-establishm­ent camp.”

“With no democrats, it will be easier for the chief executive to govern as there are fewer checks and balances,” he said.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that Lee’s election “violates democratic principles and political pluralism in Hong Kong.”

“Selection process is yet another step in the dismantlin­g of the ‘one country, two systems’ principle,” Borrell tweeted.

Critics say freedom of speech and assembly that Hong Kong was promised to keep for 50 years when it was handed over by Britain to China in 1997 has vanished as Beijing exerts greater control over the territory.

On Sunday morning, three members of the League of Social Democrats, a local activist group, protested the election by attempting to march toward the election venue while displaying a banner demanding Hong Kongers to be able to vote both for the legislatur­e and the chief executive.

“Human rights over power, the people are greater than the country,” the banner read. “One person, one vote for the chief executive. Immediatel­y implement dual universal suffrage.”

 ?? PETER PARKS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? John Lee and his wife, Janet, celebrate after Lee was named the city’s new leader Sunday, in Hong Kong.
PETER PARKS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES John Lee and his wife, Janet, celebrate after Lee was named the city’s new leader Sunday, in Hong Kong.

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