New Territories East (1998 constituency) explained

Type:Geographical
New Territories East
Year:1998
Abolished:2021
Parl Name:Legislative Council of Hong Kong
Map1:NewTerritoriesEast
Map Entity:Hong Kong
Map Size:320px
Region:New Territories
District:North District
Tai Po District
Sai Kung District
Sha Tin District
Elects Howmany:Five (1998–2000)
Seven (2004–2012)
Nine (2012–2021)
Population:1,824,600 (2020)[1]
Electorate:1,139,616 (2020)[2]
Previous:New Territories East (1995),
New Territories North (1995),
New Territories North-east (1995)
New Territories South-east (1995)
Next:New Territories North (2021),
New Territories North East (2021),
New Territories South East (2021)

The New Territories East geographical constituency was one of the five geographical constituencies in the Legislative Council of Hong Kong. It was established in 1998 for the first SAR Legislative Council election and was abolished under the 2021 overhaul of the Hong Kong electoral system. It encompassed Sha Tin District, Tai Po District, North District and Sai Kung District. In the 2016 Legislative Council election, nine members of the Legislative Council using the Hare quota of party-list proportional representation with 1,139,616 electorates in 2020.

History

The single-constituency single-vote system was replaced by the party-list proportional representation system for the first SAR Legislative Council election designed by Beijing to reward the weaker pro-Beijing candidates and dilute the electoral strength of the majority pro-democrats.[3] Five seats were allocated to New Territories East, where popular democrat legislator Emily Lau of The Frontier topped the poll by winning more than 30 per cent of the popular vote with Cyd Ho also being elected. Although relatively weak in the region, the pro-democracy Democratic Party's Andrew Cheng also won a seat, while the pro-Beijing Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB) Lau Kong-wah whose Civil Force (CF) had a strong presence in Sha Tin District, also won a seat. The last seat was taken by former Legislative Council President Andrew Wong, beating pro-business Liberal Party chairman Allen Lee.

In the 2000 Legislative Council election, Cyd Ho switched to Hong Kong Island. Her vacancy was taken up by Democrat Wong Sing-chi who led a separate ticket targeting North District and Tai Po District, while Andrew Cheng targeted Sha Tin District and Sai Kung District. Two extra seats were added to New Territories East in 2004 election, in which the pro-democrats formed a star-dubbed "7.1 United Front" ticket which aimed at winning five seats riding on the pro-democracy wave from the 2003 mass demonstration. However only the first three candidates, Andrew Cheng, Emily Lau and Ronny Tong were elected, while the fourth candidate Wong Sing-chi was ousted. The DAB ticket also won two seats with Li Kwok-ying of the rural background also won a new seat. James Tien of the Liberal Party who was at the peak of his popularity from his opposition to the Basic Law Article 23 legislation contested in the constituency for the first time, while socialist activist "Long Hair" Leung Kwok-hung won the last seat, unexpectedly ousting Andrew Wong.

James Tien lost his re-election in the 2008 Legislative Council election as the Liberal Party's popularity declined, and was replaced by Wong Sing-chi. Leung Kwok-hung of the League of Social Democrats (LSD) rose to the top of the poll among the pro-democrats and Emily Lau dropped to the last. Lau decided to merge the Frontier into the Democratic Party after the party and became its vice chairwoman. In 2010 Leung Kwok-hung resigned from his office to trigger a by-election as part of the de facto "Five Constituencies Referendum" to pressure the government on the 2012 constitutional reform package. Leung was re-elected with a low turnout due to the government and pro-Beijing boycott, while Emily Lau's Democratic Party brokered a compromise with the Beijing authorities over the reform proposal, which increased the seats of the Legislative Council from 30 to 35, making the number of the seats in New Territories East from seven to nine.[4] [5]

In the 2012 Legislative Council election, the Democrats put forward an offensive strategy by fielding three tickets hoping to retain their current three seats. However with the radical democrats' ferocious attacks on their compromised position on the electoral reform, the Democrats retained only Emily Lau's seat while People Power's Raymond Chan and Neo Democrats' Gary Fan who quit the Democratic Party each won a seat. The DAB retained their two seats by splitting their ticket into two, each led by Chan Hak-kan and Elizabeth Quat. Fernando Cheung of the Labour Party and James Tien of the Liberal Party also returned to the Legislative Council through New Territories East.

Over the debate on the 2016/2017 constitutional reform proposal, Civic Party moderate Ronny Tong resigned over his difference with the party and triggered a February 2016 by-election. Although Civic Alvin Yeung defeated DAB's Holden Chow, Edward Leung of the pro-independence Hong Kong Indigenous (HKI) received a better-than-expected results which boosted the localist camp morale.[6] Edward Leung was later on barred from running in the September 2016 general election an instead supported Youngspiration's Baggio Leung who was elected. While Lam Cheuk-ting succeeded Emily Lau who was retiring, New People's Party's Eunice Yung who was supported by Civil Force ousted Gary Fan.

Baggio Leung was soon disqualified from the office due to his oath-taking controversy, followed by Leung Kwok-hung who was also disqualified for his oath-taking manner. A by-election was held in March 2018, where Gary Fan made a comeback by defeating Tang Ka-piu of the pro-Beijing Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions (FTU). However, Fan was later unseated by the court in December 2019, as the court viewed pro-independence candidate Ventus Lau's disqualification in the by-election was unlawful.[7]

Returned members

Below are all the members returned for the New Territories East constituency since its creation. The number of seats increased from five to nine between 1998 and 2016.

LegCo members for New Territories East, 1998–2021
TermElection Member Member Member Member Member Member Member Member Member
1998Emily Lau
Andrew Cheng

bgcolor=Honeydew Cyd Ho
Andrew Wong
2000bgcolor=Honeydew
2004Ronny Tong

James Tien

2008

Vacant
2010 (b)
2012


James Tien
Gary Fan
2016 (b)Alvin Yeung
2016

bgcolor=Honeydew
2018 (b)Vacantbgcolor=Honeydew Gary Fan
Vacant
Vacant
VacantVacantVacant

Summary of seats won

TermElectionDistribution
1st1998
41
2nd2000
41
3rd2004
43
4th2008
52
5th2012
63
6th2016
63
1998 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016
2 1 1 1
1 2 1 2 1 1
1 1 2 2 2 2
1 1
1
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 1
1 1
1
1
1
1 1 1
Pro-democracy 4 4 4 5 6 6
Pro-Beijing 1 1 3 2 3 3
Seats 5 5 7 7 9 9

Vote share summary

1998 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016
30.8 20.6 11.2 9.2
25.6 24.4 16.8 23.8 14.7 6.8
17.2 21.8 22.1 28.4 18.2 18.5
10.3 5.0 15.9 8.0 6.7 3.5
0.7
5.9 14.1
2.9 3.3
2.2
5.6
12.4 10.4 6.1
11.1 7.1 9.0
9.5 8.6
8.2 7.9
6.2 5.4
5.3 4.6
5.2
1.2
6.6
6.2
4.1
1.4
and Others 15.4 17.1 11.0 7.1 7.9 11.3
Pro-democracy 70.6 65.6 58.7 56.5 57.4 57.9
Pro-Beijing 29.4 34.4 41.3 42.1 42.4 34.6

Election results

The largest remainder method (with Hare quota) of the proportional representative electoral system was introduced in 1998, replacing the single-member constituencies of the 1995 election. Elected candidates are shown in bold. Brackets indicate the quota + remainder.

2010s

11111112
11111112

2000s

11122
111112
1211

1990s

2111

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Number of Seats for the Geographical Constituencies. Electoral Affairs Commission.
  2. Web site: Voter Registration Statistics: Geographical Constituency. Registration and Electoral Office.
  3. Book: Elections and Democracy in Greater China. Larry. Diamond. Ramon H.. Myers. OUP Oxford. 2001. 1985–6.
  4. Web site: 2010 LegCo By-election . 16 March 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160513061806/http://www.elections.gov.hk/legco2010by/eng/results_LC5.html . 13 May 2016 . dead . dmy-all .
  5. Lee, Colleen; Siu, Beatrice & Yau, Thomas (22 June 2010) "Democrats vote yes", The Standard
  6. Web site: 2016 Legislative Council Geographical Constituency New Territories By-election - Election Result. Electoral Affairs Commission. 29 February 2016.
  7. News: Pro-democracy lawmakers Au Nok-hin and Gary Fan lose seats as Hong Kong's top court rejects election petition appeals. 17 December 2019. Hong Kong Free Press.