2012 Democratic Party (HK) leadership election

The Democratic Party leadership election was held on 16 December 2012 for the 30-member 10th Central Committee of the Democratic Party in Hong Kong, including chairman and two vice-chairman posts. The incumbent acting Chairwomen Emily Lau defeated Vice-Chairman Sin Chung-kai by a narrow margin, becoming the first Chairwoman of the party. 300 party members voted in the election.[1]

Democratic Party (HK) leadership election

16 December 2012
 
Candidate Emily Lau Sin Chung-kai Au Nok-hin
Ballot 149 133 14
Percentage 50.3% 44.9% 4.7%

Chairman before election

Emily Lau (acting)

Elected Chairman

Emily Lau

Eligibility

The Central Committee was elected by the party congress. All public office holders, including the members of the Legislative Council and District Councils, are eligible to vote in the party congress. Every 30 members can also elect a delegate who holds one vote in the congress.[2]

Overview

After the devastating defeat in the 2012 Legislative Council election, Chairman Albert Ho resigned as leader, citing failure to present a united front for the pan-democratic camp, failure to retain seats from the previous elections, and infighting between pro-democracy parties. The chairmanship was temporarily taken over by vice-chairwoman Emily Lau until the leadership election in the end of the year.[3]

Emily Lau, prominent figure in the pro-democracy camp who had been legislator for New Territories East since 1991 only joined and became one of the two Vice-Chairmen of the Democratic Party in 2008 after she quit her group the Frontier as founding convenor. Emily Lau decided to run in last-minute candidate after repeatedly saying she would not run.[4]

Tho other vice-chairman Sin Chung-kai was the founding member of the party had returned into the LegCo in 2012 for Hong Kong Island after serving as the representative of the Information Technology functional constituency for ten years. Sin headed a 12-member team with the slogan "breakthrough, reform, democracy". The Team included Richard Tsoi Yiu-cheong and Lo Kin-hei who were contested for the two Vice-Chairman posts.[4]

Southern District Councillor Au Nok-hin who was 25 years old, joined the party in 2009 and was elected a district councillor in 2011. Au ran for the Chairman post but he said he knew he had little chance of winning but wanted to demonstrate the party did not have a "big brother culture".[4]

Candidates

Chairman

Vice-Chairmen

Elections

Chairman election
CandidateVotes %
Emily Lau Wai-hing14950.3
Sin Chung-kai13344.9
Au Nok-hin144.7
Vice-Chairmen election
CandidateVotes %
Richard Tsoi Yiu-cheong18935.8
Lo Kin-hei17332.8
Wu Chi-wai16631.4
Central Committee election
CandidateVotes
Wu Chi-wai260
Albert Ho Chun-yan258
Sin Chung-kai247
Yeung Sum218
Cheung Man-kwong214
Josephine Chan Shu-ying210
Helena Wong Pik-wan209
Tam Chun-kit204
Cheung Yin-tung196
Au Nok-hin188
Andrew Wan Siu-kin184
Ng Wing-fai181
Ricky Or Yiu-lam181
Yuen Hoi-man175
Chai Man-hon159
Li Wing-shing158
Lai King-wai155
Lam Chung-hoi155
Lee Wing-tat155
Kwong Chun-yu147
Andrew Chiu Ka-yin145
Mark Li Kin-yin144
Christopher Tsoi Yu-lung137
Wong Sing-chi135
Tsui Hon-kwong134
Eric Lam Lap-chi128
Joseph Chow Kam-siu126
Ray-Joshua Au Chun-wah124
Wong King-fong113
Leung Ka-yu112
Edmond Lau Chun-yip106
Ying Wing-ho92
Edmund Lee Kin-man88
Chiu Chung-lam83
Lam Wai-kei80
Jimmy Law Sai-yan78
Lam Ho-yeung73
Chui Pak-tai72
Lam Wing-yin66
Lam Hon-kin43
Joanna Leung Suk-ching40
Li Hung-por27
Andrew Lo Chung-park19

Results

The incumbent acting Chairwomen Emily Lau defeated Vice-Chairman Sin Chung-kai by a narrow margin, becoming the first Chairwoman of the party.[1] Nevertheless, Richard Tsoi Yiu-cheong and Lo Kin-hei were both elected as Vice-Chairmen,[4] by defeating legislator Wu Chi-wai for Kowloon East. Wu still won the most votes for a seat on the Central Committee.[1] Lo, 28 years old, became the youngest Vice-Chairman of the party's history.[5] 11 of the 30 new central committee members were under 40 years old with the average age of 44, 4 years younger than the last committee.[5]

The elected members of the 10th Central Committee are listed as following:

  • Central Committee Members:

Aftermath

Political analyst Ma Ngok expressed disappointment at the result and doubted the new leader could rejuvenate the party. "Lau is a veteran politician who first ran in a direct election for the Legislative Council 20 years ago. She belongs to the first generation, like Sin. She has appeared to be quite distant from civil society in recent years. How can she rejuvenate the party? She won by a narrow margin. Neither she nor Sin is a popular leader," Ma said.[1]

References

  1. "Emily Lau Wai-hing becomes Democratic Party's first chairwoman". South China Morning Post. 17 December 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  2. Kuan, Hsin-chi; Liu, Zhaojia; Wang, Jiaying, eds. (2002). Out of the Shadow of 1997?: The 2000 Legislative Council Election in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Chinese University Press. p. 156.
  3. "TVB pearl newscast 10/9/2012".
  4. "Emily Lau turns Democratic Party chairman election into three-way race". South China Morning Post. 12 December 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  5. "劉 慧 卿 當 選 民 主 黨 主 席". Singtao. 17 December 2012. Archived from the original on 18 December 2002. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.