Business Day

China makes sure Hong Kong can spring no election surprises

• Poll overhaul is the latest effort to remake Hong Kong and signals a rejection of the democratic institutio­ns tolerated since 1997

- Iain Marlow and Kari Lindberg

For almost a quarter of a century, Hong Kong stood as the one place under Beijing’s rule with open elections. A landslide loss just over a year ago may have finally convinced China to end the experiment in democracy.

In late 2019, Hong Kong’s democratic opposition rode the momentum of historic protests to win an unpreceden­ted 85% of the seats on local district councils. More significan­tly, the victory gave them scores more votes on the 1,200-member committee that selects Hong Kong’s leader — making it harder for Beijing to guarantee a loyal replacemen­t if CEO Carrie Lam left office.

On Friday, China laid out sweeping plans to prevent similar surprises in future Hong Kong elections, requiring candidates for office to be “patriots” and reportedly removing district councillor­s from the next leadership vote. The proposal, which legislator­s in Beijing are expected to pass within days, signals a dramatic rejection of the democratic institutio­ns China had tolerated in the former British colony since regaining sovereignt­y in 1997.

When the next election will even happen is unclear. Local media reported that authoritie­s would delay a vote to choose members of the city’s 70-seat legislativ­e council until September 2022, after postponing it last year, ostensibly due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“The Chinese authoritie­s have reached the limit of their patience, and they’ll no longer accept an effective pro-democracy movement,” said Joseph Cheng, a democracy activist and former political science professor at the City University of Hong Kong who relocated to Australia. “They’ll no longer accept any serious checks and balances.”

The election overhaul is just the latest effort by Beijing to remake Hong Kong after the 2019 unrest, which saw as many as 2-million protesters join peaceful marches and proindepen­dence demonstrat­ors clash with police. The National People’s Congress (NPC) imposed a sweeping security law on the city in 2020, leading to the arrest of 100 opposition figures and activists, prompting sanctions from the US.

Despite US and UK claims that China is violating its treaty commitment­s to maintain Hong Kong’s “high degree of autonomy” until 2047, President Xi Jinping has pushed to tighten control. The campaign illustrate­s the challenge China poses to US President Joe Biden’s pledge to work with American allies to check the global erosion of democratic institutio­ns.

Senior Chinese legislator Wang Chen told NPC deputies on Friday that the election changes are necessary to prevent “anti-China forces” from “seizing the legislativ­e council and seizing the jurisdicti­on over Hong Kong”.

Lam, who was appointed by China, pledged in a statement to carry out the overhaul to make sure the government’s critics do not “harm Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability”.

Hong Kong democracy has always sat on shaky ground, with the British colonial government only allowing the first direct legislativ­e council elections in the last days of its rule in 1997. When China took over, they rolled back the last democratic reforms by outgoing governor Chris Patten and implemente­d a system to ensure that his Chinese successors were Beijing loyalists.

China allowed the experiment to continue for two decades, agreeing in 2010 to allow a majority of legislativ­e seats to be directly elected and carrying out talks for an eventual public vote for CEO.

Still, seats were distribute­d in the government’s favour, meaning pro-democracy candidates never won a majority even though they routinely got more than half of the vote. The landslide district elections in November 2019 showed that the opposition had finally built an organisati­on that could overcome Beijing’s advantages at the ballot box. In the months ahead, opposition leaders set their sights on a bigger prize: the legislativ­e council. They crafted a plan they called “35-plus” to win a majority and vote down Lam’s budget, forcing her to resign.

The plan alarmed Beijing. Authoritie­s announced that they would delay the September election for a year. Then, earlier this week, the government charged 47 organisers and participan­ts in a primary to select legislativ­e candidates with “conspiracy to commit subversion” under the security law, allegation­s that carry a sentence as long as life in prison. Most of the group were jailed without bail ahead of a trial.

“Beijing is so fearful of Hong Kong people that it is not enough to arrest and deny bail to those who participat­ed in the 35-plus campaign,” said Victoria Hui, an associate professor of the department of political science at the University of Notre Dame. “It wants to make sure that it can control all future elections.”

THE CHINESE HAVE REACHED THE LIMIT OF THEIR PATIENCE. THEY’LL NO LONGER ACCEPT AN EFFECTIVE PRO-DEMOCRACY MOVEMENT

Joseph Cheng Democracy activist

ELECTION CHANGES ARE NECESSARY TO PREVENT ANTI-CHINA FORCES FROM SEIZING JURISDICTI­ON OVER HONG KONG

Wang Chen Chinese legislator

Under China’s plan, the committee that selects the CEO would be “adjusted and improved”, replacing opposition district councillor­s with officials picked by the Communist Party. Beijing is also seeking to eliminate five city-wide “super-seats” on the legislativ­e council, which were the only ones that could be voted on by all 7.5-million people, Now TV reported.

Ivan Choy, a politics lecturer at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said the city is likely to return to a period resembling the 1970s, when residents engaged in less formal “pressure group politics” to influence the colonial government. “In the past two or three decades, we’ve had opposition politics. But in the future we may not have these kind of politics, because democrats may be excluded from parties and even the legislatur­e,” Choy said.

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Charged: Clarisse Yeung, a prodemocra­cy district councillor in Hong Kong, speaks to media outside the West Kowloon Magistrate­s Courts following a bail hearing on March 5.
/Bloomberg Charged: Clarisse Yeung, a prodemocra­cy district councillor in Hong Kong, speaks to media outside the West Kowloon Magistrate­s Courts following a bail hearing on March 5.

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