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Hong Kong has no legislation for political parties; thus, it has no legal definition for what a political party is. Most political parties and political groups registered either as limited companies or societies. In Hong Kong, there were two main political ideological blocs, which presents to pro-democracy camp (include localists) and pro ...
At its peak, it won six seats in the Hong Kong legislature during the 2012 elections, and was the city’s second-largest pro-democracy party after the Democratic Hong Kong's 2nd largest pro ...
Chu Kwok-keung is a Hong Kong teacher and pro-Beijing politician, elected as a member of Legislative Council in 2021. [2]Chu currently serves as the vice-chairman Hong Kong Federation of Education Workers, [3] a pro-Beijing teachers union, [4] and as a secondary school principal. [5]
The 2023 Hong Kong electoral changes were proposed by the government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) on 2 May 2023 in the 18 District Councils of Hong Kong for the following December elections and approved by Legislative Council on 6 July 2023. The changes are officially effective from 10 July 2023.
A Hong Kong court has found seven prominent democrats guilty of unauthorized assembly.The case is seen as the latest crackdown by China on its freest city after the imposition of a sweeping ...
Hong Kong's embattled leader Carrie Lam, who has governed the global financial hub through the unprecedented upheaval of anti-government protests and COVID-19, said on Monday she will not seek a ...
The A4 Alliance (Chinese: A4聯盟) is a political alliance of four independent lawmakers in the Legislative Council of Hong Kong.. The A4 Alliance (A4 means "Alliance of Four") was founded by four directly elected pro-Beijing politicians: Scott Leung (MP for Kowloon West), Kitson Yang (Kowloon Central), Connie Lam (New Territories South East), and Gary Zhang (New Territories North) on 15 June ...
The politics of Hong Kong takes place in a framework of a political system dominated by its quasi-constitutional document, the Hong Kong Basic Law, its own legislature, the Chief Executive as the head of government and of the Special Administrative Region and of a politically constrained multi-party presidential system. [1]