Pro-democracy Hong Kong legislators yesterday attacked a proposal for limited political reforms made by the territory’s Beijing-appointed government and tried to stall a vote expected to go in the administration’s favor.
If successful, the legislative reforms would be the first to pass in the semiautonomous former British colony since its change of sovereignty in 1997. Hong Kong’s legislature voted down a similar package in 2005.
The opposition lawmakers denounced the plan to expand the 800-member committee that selects the territory’s leader to 1,200 people for the 2012 election cycle and add 10 seats to the 60-member legislature, which is half-elected and half chosen by interest groups. Many of the interest groups represent business interests that are loyal to Beijing.
Legislator Cyd Ho Sau-lan (何秀蘭) said the reform plan doesn’t change the structure of a fundamentally undemocratic political system.
“It still puts the interests of society’s elite over the public interest. It’s a regressive package,” Ho said.
Opponents of the bill tried to delay the vote with parliamentary tactics, prolonging what is already expected to be a marathon two-day session.
Pro-democracy legislator Albert Chan (陳偉業) accused the Hong Kong government of trying to ram the bill through.
“You are not allowing rational debate. You are using rush tactics and the violence of a parliamentary majority to distort public opinion,” he said in the Legislative Council.
The bill is expected to pass because Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang (曾蔭權) struck a deal with the territory’s leading opposition party, the Democratic Party, giving him the required 40 votes for passage.
Tsang agreed on Monday to put all 10 new legislative seats to a popular vote.
The changes have split Hong Kong’s pro-democracy camp in a tactical victory for Beijing. Hardline factions have accused the Democrats of losing sight of their mission of genuinely free elections. The Democrats argue that the revised proposals are a good transition and that they will continue to campaign for full democracy.
One Democratic Party lawmaker said during the debate that he would quit the party.
“I value my relationships with my Democratic Party colleagues, but I also have to be loyal to my beliefs and my campaign promises,” Andrew Cheng Kar Foo (鄭家富) said.
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