Outgoing Chief Executive CY Leung and Carrie Lam talk handover and Hong Kong unification day after victory
Pan-democrats unsure whether to subscribe to incoming leader’s agenda
Even before she takes up the chief executive’s job in July, Hong Kong’s newly-elected leader-in-waiting has vowed to get started on building consensus on education reform – a less controversial hot potato on her plate – in order to win the trust of the opposition camp.
Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, who is widely perceived to have won Sunday’s election thanks to Beijing’s backing, called on Hongkongers yesterday to let go of “megaphone politics” and return to rational discussions.
A day after she vowed to embark on a new style of governance and heal the city’s social and political divide, Lam was in listening mode as she spent four hours touring five districts and greeting her supporters on the streets.
Asked about rowdy demonstrators waving national flags to support her, Lam said: “A competition over who’s speaking louder is no solution to minimising the social divide. In future governance, we would strive to persuade people through rational deliberations.”
Her plan to build an “all-inclusive” cabinet based on merit rather than political affiliation is already facing obstacles, with the Democratic Party barring members from joining her team. However, others appeared ready to talk to Lam about education.
“Stakeholders across the political spectrum have very similar ideas so far as education is concerned,” Lam said after meeting Legislative Council president Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen. “In fact they are 80-90 per cent identical.”
Lam said she would discuss her plan to inject an additional HK$5 billion into education with lawmakers from across the political spectrum in the coming three months, “so that we can report to Legco as soon as the next administration begins”.