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2016 President of the Hong Kong Legislative Council election

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Election for the President of the
Sixth Legislative Council
← 2012 12 October 2016 2022 →
  Majority party Minority party
 
Candidate Andrew Leung James To
Party BPA Democratic
Constituency Industrial (First) District Council (Second)
Votes 38 (58.46%) 0 (0%)

President before election

Jasper Tsang
DAB

Elected President

Andrew Leung
BPA

The election for the President of the Sixth Legislative Council took place on 12 October 2016 for members of the 6th Legislative Council of Hong Kong to among themselves elect the President of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong for the duration of the Council.

Background

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According to Article 71 of the Hong Kong Basic Law and Rule 4 of the Rules of Procedure of the Legislative Council, the President of the Legislative Council has to be a Chinese citizen of 40 years old or above, a permanent resident of Hong Kong with no right of abode in any foreign country, and has ordinarily resided in Hong Kong for not less than 20 years continuously. However, the Pro-Beijing camp candidate Andrew Leung had been British since the 1980s and hence would not be eligible to run for president should he not renounce his British citizenship. Pro-democracy camp lawmakers questioned his nationality and demanded the "declaration of renunciation", a document issued by the UK Home Office.[1]

Proceedings

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Abraham Shek presided over the election

Since James To who was the most senior member contested in the election, Leung Yiu-chung presided over the special forum and the election. Held on 11 October 2016, the special forum allowed candidates to present their manifesto and answer questions from other members. During the actual election on 12 October, Leung said the absence of provisions in the Rules of Procedures meant that no legal clarifications or explanations could be sought from the legal adviser or other staff. As such, he claimed that he could not preside over the meeting if his questions were not resolved and left the meeting.

As the second most senior member who did not run for president, Abraham Shek took the chair for the rest of the election. Shek swiftly ordered the ballots to be distributed despite some members shouting in protest. Opposition councillors boycotted the election and walked out the chamber without attending the vote count.[2]

Candidates

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Candidate Party affiliation Political camp Born Political office

Andrew Leung
GBS MBE JP
BPA Pro-Beijing 24 February 1951 (age 65)
Hong Kong
Chairman of the House Committee of the Legislative Council (since 2012)
Member of Legislative Council for Industrial (First) (since 2004)
Chairman of the BPA (since 2012)

James To
Democratic Pro-democracy 11 March 1963 (age 53)
Hong Kong
Member of the Legislative Council for District Council (Second) (since 2012)
Member of the Yau Tsim Mong District Council (2000-2007; since 2012)
Member of the Legislative Council for Kowloon West (1998-2012)
Member of the Legislative Council for Kowloon South-west (1995-1997)
Member of the Legislative Council for Kowloon West (1991-1995)

Results

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Abraham Shek announced that Andrew Leung was duly elected at 17:30.

Candidate Votes %
Andrew Leung Green tickY 38 58.46
James To 0 0
Blank ballots 3 4.62
Other spoilt/rejected ballots 24 36.92
Turnout (out of 67[a]) 65 97.01

Before adjourning the meeting, Leung said he accepted the position with a heavy heart and hoped there would be more communication across both camps.[3]

Notes

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  1. ^ The clerk reported that Edward Yiu, Yau Wai-ching and Baggio Leung were ineligible to vote in the election.

References

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  1. ^ Cheng, Kris (12 October 2016). "LegCo pres. hopeful Andrew Leung to present nationality document after UK citizenship renunciation row". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  2. ^ Cheng, Kris (12 October 2016). "Andrew Leung elected as speaker of the legislature as opposition lawmakers walk out of sudden vote". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  3. ^ Andrew Leung, President (12 October 2016). "Election of President" (PDF). Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Hong Kong: Legislative Council of Hong Kong.