The Democratic Party leadership election was held on 17 December 2006 for the 30-member 7th Central Committee of the Democratic Party in Hong Kong, including chairman and two vice-chairman posts. Legislative Council member and party's Vice-Chairman Albert Ho from the mainstreamer faction defeated the incumbent Vice-Chairman Chan King-ming from the Young Turks faction with a large margin, succeeding Lee Wing-tat as the chairman of the party.
| |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
|
Eligibility
editThe 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.[1]
Overview
editThe Democratic Party was suffering from the intra-party factional struggles between the mainstreamers and Young Turk reformists, while it was also facing the external challenge from the newly established Civic Party from the same pan-democracy camp.[citation needed]
In March, 2006, the Mainstreamer faction alleged that some senior members were involved in spying activities of China. The "suspects" were all Young Turks Reformist members including vice-chairman and chairman of the New Territories East branch Chan King-ming and District Councillor Gary Fan Kwok-wai in New Territories East.
On 27 November, the incumbent vice-chairman and legislative council member Albert Ho announced he would run for the chairman post with a cabinet list, including legislative council member Sin Chung-kai and Central Committee member Tik Chi-yuen running for the two vice-chairman posts, Peggy Ha Ving-vung for the secretary post and Cheung Yin-tung for the treasurer post.[citation needed]
Supported by the reformist Young Turks faction, another incumbent vice-chairman, Chan King-ming, ran for the chairman for the second time after his defeat by Lee Wing-tat in the last party leadership election in 2004.
Elections
editChairman election [2] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % | |
Albert Ho Chun-yan | 204 | 71.6 | |
Chan King-ming | 81 | 28.4 |
Vice-Chairmen election [2] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % | |
Sin Chung-kai | 180 | 32.7 | |
Tik Chi-yuen | 170 | 30.9 | |
Fung Wai-kwong | 79 | 14.4 | |
Shirley Ho Suk-ping | 73 | 13.3 | |
Cosmas Kwong Kwok-chuen | 48 | 8.7 |
Central Committee election[2] | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | |
Yeung Sum | 221 | |
Law Chi-kwong | 216 | |
Lee Wing-tat | 210 | |
Szeto Wah | 210 | |
Wu Chi-wai | 209 | |
Cheung Yin-tung | 208 | |
Josephine Chan Shu-ying | 207 | |
Simon Lee Shiu-man | 200 | |
Ng Wing-fai | 197 | |
Nelson Wong Kin-shing | 197 | |
Wong Sing-chi | 196 | |
Mark Li Kin-yin | 195 | |
Tsui Hon-kwong | 194 | |
James To Kun-sun | 192 | |
Howard Lam Tsz-kin | 191 | |
Chai Man-hon | 188 | |
Chan Ka-wai | 187 | |
Peggy Ha Ving-vung | 179 | |
Law Chun-ngai | 179 | |
Ng Kim-sing | 176 | |
Mok Siu-lun | 166 | |
Cheung Yuet-lan | 163 | |
Kwong Chun-yu | 158 | |
Lam Wing-yin | 156 | |
Yuen Bun-keung | 153 | |
Leung Kai-wah | 150 | |
Joanna Leung Suk-ching | 150 | |
Fung Wai-kwong | 144 | |
Chiu Chung-lam | 121 | |
Gary Fan Kwok-wai | 114 | |
Chan King-ming | 110 | |
Shirley Ho Suk-ping | 96 | |
Cosmas Kwong Kwok-chuen | 96 | |
Yam Kai-bong | 98 | |
Kwan Wing-yip | 89 | |
Raymond Luk Yiu-man | 65 | |
Wong Chun-wai | 60 | |
Sham Wing-kan | 51 | |
Lai Chi-keong | 46 | |
Wong Leung-hi | 46 | |
Lau Tai-sang | 36 | |
Lam Chung-hoi | 32 | |
Cheung Po-hop | 30 | |
Chow Wai-tung | 22 | |
Wong Fung-yau | 21 |
Results
editThe mainstreamer legislator Albert Ho defeated reformist Vice-Chairman Chan King-ming by winning 204 to 81 votes.[citation needed] Sin Chung-kai and Tik Chi-yuen from Ho's team also elected Vice-Chairmen with 180 and 170 votes respectively, defeating Cosmas Kwong Kwok-chuen the Young Turk reformist, Andrew Fung Wai-kwong of the Meeting Point faction, and Shirley Ho Suk-ping supported by legislator and founding Chairman Martin Lee Chu-ming and legislator Andrew Cheng Kar-foo.[3] 26 of the 27 mainstreamers candidates were elected except for Chiu Chung-lam, chairman of the Kowloon East branch. Andrew Fung was the single candidate of the Meeting Point faction who was elected to the Central Committee. The seven reformist members were all defeated.[3]
The elected members of the 7th Central Committee are listed as following:
- Chairman: Albert Ho
- Vice-Chairmen: Sin Chung-kai, Tik Chi-yuen
- Secretary: Peggy Ha
- Treasurer: Cheung Yin-tung
- Executive Committee Members:
- Chan Ka-wai
- Josephine Chan Shu-ying
- Howard Lam Tsz-kin
- Law Chi-kwong
- Lee Wing-tat
- Ng Wing-fai
- Szeto Wah
- Tsui Hon-kwong
- Wong Sing-chi
- Yeung Sum
- Central Committee Members:
- Chai Man-hon
- Cheung Yuet-lan
- Fung Wai-kwong
- Kwong Chun-yu
- Lam Wing-yin
- Law Chun-ngai
- Lee Shiu-man
- Joanna Leung Suk-ching
- Mark Li Kin-yin
- Mok Siu-lun
- Ng Kim-sing
- James To Kun-sun
- Wong Kin-shing
- Wu Chi-wai
- Yuen Bun-keung
Aftermath
editThe newly elected Chairman Albert Ho said his team won because the party members understood that they were in crisis and needed a strong leadership. He called for the intra-party solidarity.[3]
Political scientist Ivan Choy commented that the election results showed the loss of trust between the mainstreamers and reformists. The New Territories East branch which the reformists dominated would confront the party's central authorities. That might lead to another split if the conflicts continued and bad election results came out badly in the district council elections next year.[3]
References
edit- ^ 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.
- ^ a b c 民主黨第七屆中委會及紀委會選舉結果 (PDF). The Democratic Party (in Chinese). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 January 2007.
- ^ a b c d 民主黨改選 改革派全數落馬 何俊仁高票膺主席. Apple Daily (in Chinese). 18 December 2006.