Current:Home > NewsHong Kong leader praises election turnout as voter numbers hit record low -FinanceCore
Hong Kong leader praises election turnout as voter numbers hit record low
View
Date:2025-04-15 12:40:39
HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong leader John Lee on Tuesday praised the 27.5% voter turnout in the city’s weekend election, a record low since the territory returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
Sunday’s district council election was the first held under new rules introduced under Beijing’s direction that effectively shut out all pro-democracy candidates.
“The turnout of 1.2 million voters has indicated that they supported the election, they supported the principles,” Lee said at a news conference.
“It is important that we focus our attention on the outcome of the election, and the outcome will mean a constructive district council, rather than what used to be a destructive one,” he said.
Sunday’s turnout was significantly less than the record 71.2% of Hong Kong’s 4.3 million registered voters who participated in the last election, held at the height of anti-government protests in 2019, which the pro-democracy camp won by a landslide.
Lee said there was resistance to Sunday’s election from prospective candidates who were rejected under the new rules for being not qualified or lacking the principles of “patriots” administering Hong Kong.
“There are still some people who somehow are still immersed in the wrong idea of trying to make the district council a political platform for their own political means, achieving their own gains rather than the district’s gain,” he said.
The district councils, which primarily handle municipal matters such as organizing construction projects and public facilities, were Hong Kong’s last major political bodies mostly chosen by the public.
But under the new electoral rules introduced under a Beijing order that only “patriots” should administer the city, candidates must secure endorsements from at least nine members of government-appointed committees that are mostly packed with Beijing loyalists, making it virtually impossible for any pro-democracy candidates to run.
An amendment passed in July also slashed the proportion of directly elected seats from about 90% to about 20%.
“The de facto boycott indicates low public acceptance of the new electoral arrangement and its democratic representativeness,” Dominic Chiu, senior analyst at research firm Eurasia Group, wrote in a note.
Chiu said the low turnout represents a silent protest against the shrinking of civil liberties in the city following Beijing’s imposition of a tough national security law that makes it difficult to express opposition.
“Against this backdrop, the public took the elections as a rare opportunity to make their opposition to the new normal known — by not turning up to vote,” he said.
Since the introduction of the law, many prominent pro-democracy activists have been arrested or have fled the territory.
veryGood! (19)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Godmother of A.I. Fei-Fei Li on technology development: The power lies within people
- He was told his 9-year-old daughter was dead. Now she’s believed to be alive and a hostage in Gaza
- Russian artist sentenced to 7 years for antiwar protest at supermarket: Is this really what people are being imprisoned for now?
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- As fighting surges in Myanmar, an airstrike in the west reportedly kills 11 civilians
- Alexa PenaVega Is Pregnant, Expecting Baby No. 4 With Carlos PenaVega
- FedEx mistakenly delivers $20,000 worth of lottery tickets to Massachusetts woman's home
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- No evidence yet to support hate crime charge in death of pro-Israel protester, officials say
Ranking
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- IBM pulls ads from Elon Musk’s X after report says they appeared next to antisemitic posts
- 'I got you!' Former inmate pulls wounded Houston officer to safety after shootout
- El Salvador’s Miss Universe pageant drawing attention at crucial moment for president
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- British writer AS Byatt, author of ‘Possession,’ dies at 87
- Russian authorities ask the Supreme Court to declare the LGBTQ ‘movement’ extremist
- Russian artist sentenced to 7 years for antiwar protest at supermarket: Is this really what people are being imprisoned for now?
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Las Vegas high schoolers facing murder charges in their classmate’s death due in court
DeSantis appointees seek Disney communications about governor, laws in fight over district
NFL host Charissa Thompson says on social media she didn’t fabricate quotes by players or coaches
What to watch: O Jolie night
K-Pop star Rose joins first lady Jill Biden to talk mental health
Shohei Ohtani, Ronald Acuña Jr. win MLB MVP awards for historic 2023 campaigns
Pennsylvania high court justice’s name surfaces in brother’s embezzlement trial