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In Hong Kong, there were two main political ideological blocs, which presents to pro-democracy camp (include localists) and pro-Beijing camp. Under the newly introduced electoral system, only government-approved candidates may run, effectively disqualifying any candidates who are not from the pro-Beijing camp or approved by Beijing.
This is a list of constituencies of Hong Kong. There are currently ten geographical constituencies and 28 functional constituencies that elect 50 out of 90 members to the Legislative Council of Hong Kong .
Wikipedia categories named after political parties in Hong Kong (12 C) Pages in category "Political parties in Hong Kong" The following 53 pages are in this category, out of 53 total.
Elections in Hong Kong take place when certain political offices in the government need to be filled. Hong Kong has a multi-party system, with numerous parties in the Legislative Council. The Chief Executive of Hong Kong is nonpartisan but can work with several parties to form a coalition government.
Hong Kong political parties in the pro-establishment camp support the policies of the PRC's central government and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government. [ 40 ] : 124 Supporters of the pro-establishment camp generally have a strong sense of Chinese identity.
There are currently 5 geographical constituencies in Hong Kong, returning 35 members to the Legislative Council. [1] Following the 2021 electoral reforms passed by the Standing Committee of the mainland National People's Congress , the number of members returned by geographical constituencies would be lowered to 20, while the total number of ...
This list includes the major political parties and groups in Hong Kong: Democratic Party, the flagship pro-democracy party that succeeded the United Democrats of Hong Kong, which won a landslide victory in the 1991 first-ever direct elections of the Legislative Council.
At almost the same time, the Liberal Party shifted its stance on political development from "all Legislative Council members should be directly elected in 2007" to "Hong Kong should become more democratic." The founder and ex-chair of Liberal Party, Allen Lee, decided to leave the party since he believed the change was against public sentiment.