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Lee Wing-tat

Hong Kong politician (born 1955)


Summary

Hong Kong politician (born 1955)

FieldValue
nameLee Wing-tat
native_name李永達
native_name_langzh-hk
imageFile:Lee Wing Tat September 2015 (cropped).png
captionLee in 2015
officeChairman of the Democratic Party
term_start12 December 2004
term_end17 December 2006
predecessorYeung Sum
successorAlbert Ho
office1Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
term_start19 October 1991
term_end131 July 1995
predecessor1New constituency
successor1Constituency abolished
constituency1New Territories South
term_start211 October 1995
term_end230 June 1997
predecessor2New constituency
constituency2New Territories South-west
successor2Replaced by Provisional Legislative Council
term_start31 July 1998
term_end330 June 2000
predecessor3New parliament
successor3Albert Chan
constituency3New Territories West
term_start41 October 2004
term_end430 September 2012
predecessor4New seat
successor4Michael Tien
constituency4New Territories West
birth_date
birth_placeHong Kong
nationalityChinese
partyAssociation for Democracy and People's Livelihood (1986–1990)
United Democrats (1990–94)
Democratic Party (1994–2022)
occupationPolitician
alma_materSt. Paul's College
University of Hong Kong
spouseJosephine Chan Shu-ying

| honorific-prefix = United Democrats (1990–94) Democratic Party (1994–2022) University of Hong Kong

Lee Wing-tat (; born 25 December 1955) is a former Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo), returned by direct election as representative of the New Territories West constituency. He was the former third Chairman of the Democratic Party (DP). He is seen as a conservative inside the party.

Early life

A Hakka, Lee was elected vice-chairman of the Hong Kong University Students' Union in 1979. He graduated from the Faculty of Science of the University of Hong Kong with a pass. He first participated in politics in the 1980s and was the vice-chairman of the Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood (ADPL). He was elected to the District Council and the Regional Council in 1985 and 1986 respectively. He was a founding member of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China.

In 1989, during the visit of Geoffrey Howe to Hong Kong, Lee protested at the conference and called Howe's speech "bullshit".

Lee left the ADPL and formed the United Democrats of Hong Kong, which developed into the Democratic Party in 1994. He was elected to the Legco in the same year. He once lost his seat in the 2000 election but was re-elected in 2004. He was vice-chairman of Democratic Party from 2002 to 2004 and was elected chairman at the sixth AGM of the DP in succession to Yeung Sum. His challenger for the Chairman's post, Chan King-ming, was elected vice-chairman instead.

Chairmanship of Democratic Party

Chief Executive Election

In May 2005, Lee declared his intention to run in the Hong Kong Chief Executive Election, but only received 52 nominations and thus failed to get on the ballot. As a result, he withdrew from the election on 15 June. His participation in the election faced great criticisms within the party and the pro-democracy camp.

Criticisms

Lee was criticized for suppressing the second-tier members and "Young Turks" of the party. In early 2006, someone alleged to the Apple Daily that some senior members were involved in spying activities of China. The "suspects" were all Young Turks and included vice-chairman Chan King Ming and Gary Fan. The Young Turks later held a press conference to criticise the list of "suspects", with some even directly naming Lee as responsible.

Departure

Lee did not seek a second term as party chairman in the party's internal elections in December 2006.

Views, policy positions and Legco voting

In June 2010, he voted with the party in favour of the government's 2012 constitutional reform package, which included the late amendment by the Democratic Party – accepted by the Beijing government – to hold a popular vote for five new District Council functional constituencies.

References

References

  1. Elliott, John. (July 4, 1989). "Hong Kong vents anger over UK refusal on passports". Financial Times: Europe's Business Newspaper.
  2. (12 December 2004). "Hong Kong Democrats name new leader". RTHK.
  3. Cheers and jeers for political reform vote, [[South China Morning Post. SCMP]], Gary Cheung, Albert Wong and Fanny WY Fung, 25 June 2010
Wikipedia Source

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