Advertisement

Political realities

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP

The election of Leung Chun-ying as Hong Kong's third chief executive showed that Beijing could - and should - have left the decision to the people of Hong Kong. Ultimately, the official results proved of marginal interest. Leung's poor showing, securing only 689 votes out of 1,200, was largely caused by Beijing's decision to first back his rival Henry Tang Ying-yen. The Chinese authorities shifted their endorsement to Leung only after Tang had grossly mismanaged a series of scandals that had made him unelectable.

Advertisement

Clearly, the formal electoral results are not manifestations of the popular will in Hong Kong. Rather, it was left to a mock election exercise run by academics at the University of Hong Kong to reveal real insight into voter perceptions and consequently provide valuable lessons that the Chinese government should heed come the next election in 2017.

More than 220,000 citizens took part in the voting exercise. Nearly 55per cent rejected all three candidates, while 17.8per cent voted for Leung, 16.3per cent for Tang and only 11.4per cent for Albert Ho Chun-yan, the pro-democracy candidate staunchly opposed by Beijing.

These results are highly significant for three reasons. First and foremost, we now know someone like Ho would not have been elected had there been a free election. The disappointing outcome for the Democratic Party leader demonstrates that voters in Hong Kong are politically realistic and astute enough to realise there is little point in voting for a candidate with whom the Chinese government will refuse to do business.

Ho secured few votes even though he was the only candidate to remain untainted by scandal. The low percentage should persuade Beijing that allowing the people of Hong Kong a free vote would not automatically mean candidates it deemed unacceptable would win office. The renowned pragmatism of the people of Hong Kong is alive and well - electoral democracy in Hong Kong would not have breached Beijing's bottom line.

Advertisement

Second, at 17.8per cent, Leung secured an exceptionally low approval rating in his 'election', representing the worst possible start for any new chief executive. The mock election showed that Leung is not seen as a credible chief executive by a clear majority of the local people.

Winning only 57per cent of the votes from the official Election Committee also shows that he lacks widespread support from the business community, which enjoys a disproportionately strong representation on the committee. Since credibility is essential for any chief executive to function effectively, Leung now has a mountain to climb, with next to no scope to claim that he enjoys a mandate from the people.

Advertisement