2016 Hong Kong Election Committee Subsector elections

The 2016 Election Committee subsector elections were held on 11 December 2016 for 1,034 of the 1,200 members of the Election Committee (EC) which is responsible for electing the Chief Executive of Hong Kong (CE) in the 2017 election.

2016 Election Committee subsector elections

11 December 2016

1,034 (of the 1,200) seats in the Election Committee
Turnout46.53% 18.93pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Starry Lee Lam Shuk-yee Wu Chi-wai
Party DAB FTU Democratic
Alliance Pro-Beijing Pro-Beijing Democrats 300+
Seats won 53 44 15

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Alvin Yeung Felix Chung Lo Wai-kwok
Party Civic Liberal BPA
Alliance Democrats 300+ Pro-Beijing Pro-Beijing
Seats won 14 13 10

Although incumbent Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying announced, two days before the election, that he would not be standing, the pro-democrats, whose campaign theme was opposition to Leung serving a second term, won a record quarter of the seats on the EC under the banner of "Democrats 300+" on a nearly 20 per cent surge in turnout over 2011.[1]

Background

The pro-democracy camp pocketed 205 seats in the 1,200-strong Election Committee and nominated Albert Ho of the Democratic Party to run against Leung Chun-ying and Henry Tang in 2012. The main goal for the pro-democrats in this election was to grab more than 300 seats to increase the chance of blocking the incumbent Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying to re-elected. In order to do that, the camp tended not to send a candidate in the election and become a "kingmaker" by boosting the chance for an alternative establishment candidate.[2]

The six pro-democrats elected to the Legislative Council in functional constituencies in September, including Edward Yiu who took the seat in the traditional pro-Beijing sector and Leung Chun-ying's stronghold Architectural, Surveying, Planning and Landscape, formed an alliance called the Professionals Guild to coordinate candidates to contest in the Election Committee election. The victory in the Legislative Council functional constituencies encouraged the pro-democrats to take a more progressive strategy in the professional sector, in which the pro-democrats traditionally had more advantages.[2] The pro-democrat professionals and activists also formed a loose coalition called "Democrats 300+" hoping to snatch over 300 seats in the committee.[3]

Some 300 candidates had also voiced opposition towards Leung Chun-ying re-election.[3] Only 189 out of 305 of those who nominated Leung in 2012 sought to join the Election Committee this year.[4] On 9 December, two days before the election, Leung announced he would not seek re-election, citing family reasons.[5]

Composition

The Election Committee consisted of 1,034 members elected from 35 subsectors, 60 members nominated by the Religious subsector and 106 ex officio members. (Hong Kong deputies from the National People's Congress and Legislative Council of Hong Kong members). As the term of office commenced on 1 February 2016, the 1,200 member Election Committee was formed by 38 Election Committee Subsectors:[6]

  1. Heung Yee Kuk (26)
  2. Agriculture and Fisheries (60)
  3. Insurance (18)
  4. Transport (18)
  5. Education (30)
  6. Legal (30)
  7. Accountancy (30)
  8. Medical (30)
  9. Health Services (30)
  10. Engineering (30)
  11. Architectural, Surveying and Planning (30)
  12. Labour (60)
  13. Social Welfare (60)
  14. Real Estate and Construction (18)
  15. Tourism (18)
  16. Commercial (First) (18)
  17. Commercial (Second) (18)
  18. Industrial (First) (18)
  19. Industrial (Second) (18)
  20. Finance (18)
  21. Financial Services (18)
  22. Sports, Performing Arts, Culture and Publication (60)
  23. Import and Export (18)
  24. Textiles and Garment (18)
  25. Wholesale and Retail (18)
  26. Information Technology (30)
  27. Higher Education (30)
  28. Hotel (17)
  29. Catering (17)
  30. Chinese Medicine (30)
  31. Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (51)
  32. Employers' Federation of HK (16)
  33. HK and Kowloon District Councils (57)
  34. New Territories District Councils (60)
  35. HK Chinese Enterprises Association (16)
  36. National People's Congress (36)
  37. Legislative Council (70)
  38. Religious (60)

Note: Figures in brackets denotes the number of members.

Number of members nominated by the six designated bodies of the religious subsector:

Nominations

The nomination period was from 8 to 14 November 2016. A total number of 1,539 nominations were validated, while ten nominations were ruled invalid by the Returning Officers which included the former Chinese University of Hong Kong Students' Union president Tommy Cheung Sau-yin who led the seven-member "Student United 2017" and six members of the pro-democratic "Progressive Engineering" due to their "insufficient connection" with the Higher Education and Engineering subsectors.[7]

One nomination from the 18-member Import and Export subsector was also invalidated, which made the number of the nominated candidates of the Import and Export subsector one less than the number of seats allocated to it. Since there was no provision in the Chief Executive Election Ordinance which allowed a by-election to fill the remaining seat, the seat would be vacant.[8]

Among the 1,539 candidates, 300 of those were returned uncontested and voting for the 12 subsectors and the Sports sub-subsector would not be held.[8] For the six designated bodies of the religious subsector, four of them were uncontested. The Returning Officer arranged lots drawing for the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong and the Hong Kong Christian Council in order to decide members of the Election Committee among the nominees.[8]

Election results

Results by subsector

Statistics are generated from the official election website:

SectorSub-sectorRegistered
voters
CandidatesElectedVotesTurnout
ICatering5,5301717uncontested
ICommercial (First)1,045191860560.20
ICommercial (Second)1,4601818uncontested
IEmployers' Federation of Hong Kong1391616uncontested
IFinance1221818uncontested
IFinancial Services622331844074.45
IHong Kong Chinese Enterprises Association3081616uncontested
IHotel120191710285.00
IImport and Export1,37917*17*uncontested
IIndustrial (First)5421818uncontested
IIndustrial (Second)7641818uncontested
IInsurance13129189478.33
IReal Estate and Construction7061818uncontested
ITextiles and Garment2,3301818uncontested
ITourism1,298251872459.20
ITransport195241815982.81
IWholesale and Retail6,70621182,11832.45
ISub-total for First Sector23,3973442994,24241.93
IIAccountancy26,001623012,29647.29
IIArchitectural, Surveying and Planning7,37092304,63462.88
IIChinese Medicine6,14355302,61542.57
IIEducation80,643563033,68841.77
IIEngineering9,40558305,50658.54
IIHealth Services37,387943013,15435.18
IIHigher Education7,49765303,85051.35
IIInformation Technology12,10959307,60562.93
IILegal6,76937303,66454.13
IIMedical11,18985306,12154.71
IISub-total for Second Sector204,51366330093,13345.54
IIIAgriculture and Fisheries1546060uncontested
IIILabour668696047174.76
IIIReligiousN/A6060no election
IIISocial Welfare14,130104607,82655.44
IIISports, Performing Arts, Culture and Publication2,90985601,65075.69
IIISub-total for Third Sector17,8613783009,94758.59
IVNational People's CongressN/A3636ex officio
IVLegislative CouncilN/A7070ex officio
IVChinese People's Political Consultative Conference915151uncontested
IVHeung Yee Kuk147352613390.48
IVHong Kong and Kowloon District Councils208665719995.67
IVNew Territories District Councils223626018783.86
IVSub-total for Fourth Sector66932030051977.58
TOTAL246,4401,7051,119107,84146.53

Note: *One nomination from the 18-member Import and Export subsector was invalidated, which made the number of the nominated candidates of the Import and Export subsector one less than the number of seats allocated to it. Since there was no provision in the Chief Executive Election Ordinance which allowed a by-election to fill the remaining seat, the seat would be vacant.

Results by affiliation

 Summary of the 11 December 2016 Election Committee Subsector election results
Affiliation 1st Sector 2nd Sector 3rd Sector 4th Sector Total
Standing Elected Standing Elected Standing Elected Standing Elected Standing Elected
Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong 65 -- -- 4848 5453
Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions -- -- 3533 1111 4644
Liberal Party 1211 -- -- 22 1413
Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong 22 -- -- 88 1010
New People's Party 11 -- -- 98 109
Federation of Hong Kong and Kowloon Labour Unions -- -- 88 11 99
ABC.P.A -- 54 -- -- 54
New Territories Association of Societies -- -- -- 22 22
Chinese Association of Hong Kong & Macao Studies 11 -- -- -- 11
V18 Accountants -- 180 -- -- 180
Gov.ALPS -- 110 -- -- 110
Education Convergence -- 50 -- -- 50
Your Vote Counts -- 40 -- -- 40
Hong Kong Securities & Futures Employees Union 10 -- -- -- 10
Hong Kong Women Teachers' Organization -- 10 -- -- 10
Win Win Hong Kong Accountants -- 10 -- -- 10
Pro-Beijing Independent 319279 30153 156137 123114 898581
Total for pro-Beijing camp342299345571991782041941,091726
Health Professionals for Democracy 30 -- 2929 -- -- 2929
Hong Kong Professional Teachers' Union -- 2323 -- -- 2323
Hong Kong Social Workers' General Union -- -- 2020 -- 2020
Doctors for Democracy -- 1919 -- -- 1919
Demo-Social Front -- -- 1919 -- 1919
Democratic Party 10 1212 33 20 1815
IT Vision -- 1616 -- -- 1616
Civic Party -- 1414 -- 20 1614
Together for Social Welfare -- -- 1813 -- 1813
O Superpower -- -- 114 -- 114
Democrat Professionals Hong Kong -- 44 -- -- 44
Hearts of Accountants -- 44 -- -- 44
Professional Commons -- 22 -- -- 22
Reclaiming Social Work Movement -- -- 121 -- 121
Hong Kong Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood -- 11 -- 30 41
Labour Party -- 11 -- 10 21
Coalition of Hong Kong Newspaper and Magazine Merchant 10 -- -- -- 10
Independent democrats -- 119114 150 10 135114
Total for Democrats 300+202432381006090352298
Frontline Doctors' Union -- 33 -- -- 33
Students United 2017 -- 60 -- -- 60
User Voice -- -- 30 -- 30
Path of Democracy -- 10 -- -- 10
Tuen Mun Community Network -- -- 10 -- 10
Alliance of Housing Department Staff Unions -- -- 10 -- 10
Non-aligned independent -- 642 162 10 814
Total 344 299 663 300 318 240 214 194 1,539 1,033

Overview of outcome

Seats, of total, by camp

  Pro-Beijing (66.92%)
  Pro-democrats (27.22%)
  Other (5.86%)

The election saw a nearly 20 percent point increase of turnout compared to the 2011 election. The pro-democracy camp took a record quarter of the seat in the elections, with the help of the landslide victories in the Second sector. Clean sweeps were seen in the Legal, Education, Higher Education, Health Services, Information Technology and Social Welfare subsectors, as well as victories in other subsectors. The pro-democrats under the banner of "Democrats 300+" won 325 seats in total if included the 27 ex officio Legislative Council members.[1]

First sector

The pro-Beijing camp maintained its stronghold in the First sector. Liberal Party honorary chairman James Tien, key advocate of the so-called "ABC" – Anyone But CY Leung – campaign, received high votes in the Commercial (First) subsector along with his mentee Joseph Chan Ho-lim, each bagging more than 400 votes from corporate electors.[1] Liberal Party chairman Tommy Cheung, Legislative Council member for the Catering functional constituency also had his 17-member candidate list elected uncontestedly in the Catering subsector. Vincent Fang, the party ex-leader and former Wholesale and Retail LegCo representative also won all 18 seats against a two-member list led by Democratic Party's Au Nok-hin.

The most prominent estate developing tycoons were elected through the Real Estate and Construction subsector, including Li Ka-shing, Lee Shau-kee, Gordon Wu and Ronnie Chan who were elected uncontestedly. The Hotel subsector was dominated by property developers. Among the 17 elected members were Gary Harilela, director of Harilela Hotels, Lui Che-woo, founder of K. Wah Group, and second-generation tycoons including Sino Land's Daryl Ng, Hopewell Holdings' Thomas Wu, and Henderson Land Development's Martin Lee Ka-shing.

Second sector

The pro-democrats scored landslide victories in the professional subsectors. The Academics in Support of Democracy ticket led by Occupy Central co-founders Chan Kin-man and Benny Tai seized all the seats in the Higher Education subsector.[1] The two tickets led by pro-democrat politicians including Civic Party's Alan Leong and legal scholar Eric Cheung Tat-ming also won all the 30 seats in the Legal subsector. The other subsectors swept by the pro-democrats included Education and Information Technology subsector in which former Democratic Party legislators Cheung Man-kwong and Sin Chung-kai became the biggest winners.

The pro-democrats saw increase of their seats in the Architectural, Surveying, Planning and Landscape and the Accountancy subsectors, and secured at least half of the seats in the Engineering and Medical subsectors.[1] The three pro-democrat candidates who were under the banner of the "Democrats 300+" were also elected in the traditional pro-Beijing stronghold of Chinese Medicine subsector for the first time.

Third sector

While all 60 seats in the Agriculture and Fisheries subsector were taken by pro-Beijing candidates uncontestedly, the pro-democrats won all of the seats in the 60-member Social Welfare subsector despite the infighting among different pro-democrat tickets. Pro-democracy filmmaker Derek Yee emerged as the only candidate from his eight-member list to secure a seat in the 15-seat Performing Arts sub-subsector, which had always been monopolised by conservative pro-Beijing forces. The remaining 14 seats in the sub-subsector were taken by the Hong Kong Motion Picture Industry Association led by Beijing-friendly Crucindo Hung Cho-sing, whose ticket included actors and filmmakers Raymond Wong Pak-ming and Eric Tsang.[1] The 15 members of the pro-democracy group ARTicipants led by songwriter Adrian Chow Pok-yin were all defeated in the Culture sub-subsector against the pro-Beijing 15-member list which included veteran actress Liza Wang.[1]

Fourth sector

The 51-member Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference subsector was returned uncontestedly, while the Heung Yee Kuk subsector was seen in a rare contest. The pro-democrats contested in the Hong Kong and Kowloon District Councils subsector with a nine-member ticket but all of them were defeated by the pro-Beijing District Councillors.

See also

References

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