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Hong Kong democrats keep veto | Hong Kong democrats keep veto |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Hong Kong's pro-democracy camp has won more than a third of the seats in legislative elections, and so retains a key veto over future bills. | |
The pro-democracy opposition won 23 out of the 30 elected seats in the Legislative Council. | The pro-democracy opposition won 23 out of the 30 elected seats in the Legislative Council. |
The other 30 seats in the council are not directly elected, but allocated to special interest groups. | The other 30 seats in the council are not directly elected, but allocated to special interest groups. |
The Pro-Beijing camp had expected to make gains at the polls due to a surge of patriotism after the Olympics. | The Pro-Beijing camp had expected to make gains at the polls due to a surge of patriotism after the Olympics. |
Even some of the candidates on the pro-democracy side had been predicting the worst. | |
Some were even in tears before the results came in, expecting to lose. | |
Tougher battle | |
Hong Kong's political landscape is roughly divided along pro-Beijing and pro-democracy lines. | |
Since the territory returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997, the pro-democracy parties have fared consistently well in the polls. | |
But there were fears that, this time, the situation would be different. | |
Independent candidate Regina Ip was successful in her bid for a seatAnalysts had believed that pro-government parties would make significant gains after the surge in Chinese patriotism sparked by the Beijing Olympics and the Sichuan earthquake. | |
China had also promised the region some form of universal suffrage by 2017, blunting the democratic camp's campaign. | China had also promised the region some form of universal suffrage by 2017, blunting the democratic camp's campaign. |
There were also concerns that issues such as wages, inflation and education may eclipse the desire for democratic reform. | |
But in the event, the result was not as bad as the democratic camp had expected. | |
It won 23 seats, compared to the 26 it had previously, but held on to its veto power over major legislation. | |
"Hong Kong people still have aspiration for full democracy," said Alan Leong, a member of the opposition Civic Party, who was re-elected. "Those in power can't afford to ignore it". | |
Other leading pro-democracy figures such as Emily Lau, Audrey Eu and Leung Kwok-hung, also known as Longhair, also fought off stiff competition to keep their seat. | |
But the pro-China Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), also did well, scoring huge majorities in some districts. | |
So too did the independent candidate Regina Ip, who won her seat. | |
The pro-business Liberal Party saw its leader and deputy leader deposed in voting that leaves the party in disarray. | |
Hong Kong is ultimately controlled by Beijing, but China mostly leaves the territory to govern itself, designating it a Special Administrative Region. | |
Under this "one country, two systems" model, Hong Kong citizens enjoy far more rights and freedoms than their mainland neighbours. |