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Hong Kong local elections

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TheHong Kong local elections (Chinese:區議會選舉) are elections inHong Kong for the members ofDistrict Councils (known as District Boards before 2000). First held in1982, the elections are held at 4-year intervals. Thelast election was held on 10 December 2023. Most of district councilors were elected by general citizen on or before 2019. However, after2023 local elections reform, general citizens can be only elect 88 seats out of 470 directly.

Background

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TheGreen Paper: A Pattern of District Administration in Hong Kong was published on 6 June 1980 for public consultations on reforming local administration in Hong Kong. The Green Paper recommended that:[1]District Boards (區議會) be established in each district with some members of District Boards be returned by elections.

Upon the conclusion of public consultations, theWhite Paper: District Administration in Hong Kong in Hong Kong was published in January 1981 affirming the Government's commitment to establish District Boards in each district by March 1982. District Boards inNew Territories were to be established by reconstituting existing District Consultation Committees.[2] The Government subsequently enacted the District Board Ordinance (Cap. 366) to provide for the formation of District Boards:

  • to be composed of elected members, appointed or elected members of the Urban Council or chairmen of Rural Committees, appointed unofficial members and main official members of corresponding District Management Committees;
  • to be formed by around 25-30 members, with an unofficial majority;
  • to be initially chaired by officials, but chairmen to be elected among members as soon as possible; and
  • with 1-2 members per constituency, elected throughfirst-past-the-post voting orsingle non-transferable vote.

Thefirst elections for District Boards onHong Kong Island and inKowloon were held on 4 March 1982, whileelections for District Boards in theNew Territories were held on 23 September 1982.[3]

Electoral System

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The elections are conducted by simple plurality since 1982, with each constituency having an average population of around 17,000 people. Changes to the composition and electoral system of elected District Council members are outlined as follows:

ElectionVoting systemTotal number of elected seatsDistrict magnitude
1982first-past-the-post voting /
single non-transferable vote
132 seats1-2 seats
1985237 seats
1988264 seats
1991274 seats
1994first-past-the-post voting346 seats1 seat
1999390 seats
2003400 seats
2007405 seats
2011412 seats
2015431 seats
2019452 seats
202388 seats (Directly elected)
176 seats (Indirectly elected)
179 appointed
27 Ex-officio

Electoral Results

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District Council elections
ElectionLargest faction in
elected seats
Composition of
elected seats (by alignment)
% of popular vote won by the
largest faction in elected seats
Turnout
1994Pro-Beijing camp146:4:196









54.12%33.14%
1999157:1:232









54.69%35.82%
2003198:1:201









46.48%44.10%
2007127:2:276









53.98%38.83%
2011103:8:301









55.42%41.49%
2015126:7:298









54.61%47.01%
2019Pro-democracy camp388:2:62









57.09%71.23%
2023Pro-Beijing camp470









100%27.54%

Division of Districts and Constituencies

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A total of 18 District Councils were established, each with 11 to 37 elected members depending on the respective population. Historically, there were 19 District Councils but Mong Kok District Council was merged with the Yau Tsim District Council to form the Yau Tsim Mong District Council, named after a neologism that incorporates words from three major areas of the district into its name.

Existing District Councils are listed as follows:

Hong Kong Island

Kowloon (including New Kowloon)

New Territories (excluding New Kowloon)

Nominations

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Lists for parties and for individuals may be nominated during a two-week nomination period ending five weeks before polling day.

Candidacy requirement

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Candidates have to fulfill the following requirements:[4]

  • has reached 21 years of age;
  • is a permanent resident of Hong Kong;
  • is registered and eligible for registration as an elector for geographical constituencies;
  • has ordinary resided in Hong Kong for the 3 years immediately preceding the nomination; and
  • does not hold office as the chairman of a Rural Committee

References

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  1. ^The Hong Kong Government (1980).Green Paper: A Pattern of District Administration in Hong Kong. Hong Kong: Government Printer.
  2. ^The Hong Kong Government (1981).White Paper: District Administration in Hong Kong in Hong Kong. Hong Kong: Government Printer.
  3. ^"District Board Ordinance (Cap. 366)".Hong Kong e-Legislation.
  4. ^[1], "Guidelines on Election-related Activities in respect of the District Council Elections", Electoral Affairs Commission

External links

[edit]
Chief Executive elections
Election Committee elections
Legislative Council elections
Sanitary Board and municipal elections
District Council elections
Rural Representative elections
National People's Congress elections
Plebiscite
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