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Sha Tin District Council

Hong Kong district council

Sha Tin District Council

Summary

Hong Kong district council

FieldValue
nameSha Tin District Council
native_name
coa_picSha Tin District Council Logo.svg
coa_res180px
house_typeHong Kong District Council
bodySha Tin District
foundation(District Board)
(Provisional)
(District Council)
leader1_typeChair
leader1Frederick Yu Wai-shing
party1Independent
leader2_typeVice-Chair
leader2Vacant
members42 councillors
consisting of
8 elected member
16 district committee members
17 appointed members
1 ex officio member
seats4_titleNPP/CF
seats4
seats6_titleDAB
seats6
seats7_titleFTU
seats7
seats8_titleBPA
seats8
seats9_titleIndependent
seats9
voting_system1First past the post
last_election110 December 2023
session_roomFile:HK ShaTinGovernmentOffices.jpg
meeting_place4/F Sha Tin Government Offices, 1 Sheung Wo Che Road, Sha Tin, New Territories
website

| coa-pic = | coa-res = (Provisional) (District Council) consisting of 8 elected member 16 district committee members 17 appointed members 1 ex officio member

The Sha Tin District Council (noted as ST) is the district council for the Sha Tin District in Hong Kong. It is one of 18 such councils. The Sha Tin District Council currently consists of 42 members, of which the district is divided into four constituencies, electing a total of 8 members, 16 district committee members, 17 appointed members, and one ex officio member who is the Sha Tin rural committee chairman. The latest election was held on 10 December 2023.

History

The Sha Tin District Council was established on 1 April 1981 under the name of the Sha Tin District Board as the result of the colonial Governor Murray MacLehose's District Administration Scheme reform. The District Board was partly elected with the ex-officio Regional Council members and Sha Tin Rural Committee chairman, as well as members appointed by the Governor until 1994 when last Governor Chris Patten refrained from appointing any member.

The Sha Tin District Board became Sha Tin Provisional District Board after the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) was established in 1997 with the appointment system being reintroduced by Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa. The current Sha Tin District Council was established on 1 January 2000 after the first District Council election in 1999. The appointed seats were abolished in 2015 after the modified constitutional reform proposal was passed by the Legislative Council in 2010.

As a new town in the 1980s, Sha Tin was a strategic target for emerging pro-democracy activists, when the three major pro-democracy political groups Hong Kong Affairs Society (HKAS), Hong Kong Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood (ADPL) and Meeting Point formed a strategic alliance in the 1988 District Board election, which saw prominent politicians Fung Chi-wood, Lau Kong-wah and Choy Kan-pui launched their political careers. Lau and Choy later quit the pro-democracy United Democrats of Hong Kong (UDHK) after the 1991 Legislative Council direct election and formed a new district-based political group Civil Force in which all its candidates were elected in the 1994 election and have been dominating the council since.

The 2000s saw the intense competitions between the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB) and the Democratic Party, which saw the DAB dropped its seat from 1999 election's nine to 2003 election's two due to the anti-government sentiments following the historic 2003 July 1 protest, many of those in Ma On Shan fallen into the Democrats' hand with the defeats of Lau Kong-wah and Chan Hak-kan in Kam To and Chung On. The DAB rebounded from its defeat in the 2007 election, retaking most of its seats from the Democrats.

In 2014, Regina Ip's New People's Party (NPP) expanded its network to Sha Tin by absorbing the Civil Force, making NPP the largest party in the district. In the 2015 District Council election, the first election after the Umbrella Revolution, the pan-democrats made a surprising advance in the district, doubling their seats from 8 to 19 seats by defeating a number of veteran Civil Force councillors. The DAB also suffered some unexpected defeats in Ma On Shan, with incumbent Legislative Councillor Elizabeth Quat lost her seat to Labour Party new face Yip Wing in Chung On. However, The pro-Beijing camp was able to retain control of the council with a one-seat majority of the ex-officio seat occupied by the Sha Tin Rural Committee chairman.

In the historic landslide victory in 2019, the pro-democrats took control of the council by sweeping 40 of the 41 elected seats. Only the new constituency Di Yee was won by pro-Beijing DAB as two pro-democrat candidates split the votes which gave the DAB the victory.

In the 2023 District Council election, 8 of the 42 seats on the Sha Tin District Council will be elected by elected members, 16 seats will be elected by district committees, 17 appointed members, and 1 ex-officio member will form the current Sha Tin District In the Parliament, among the 42 members, 16 are independent members, 13 are from the New People Party, 9 are from the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of China, 3 are from the Federation of Trade Unions, and 1 is from the BPA. Among the 42 members of the House of Representatives, 42 are from the pro-establishment camp.

Political control

Since 1982 political control of the council has been held by the following parties:

Camp in controlLargest partyYearsComposition
No Overall ControlNone1982–1985
Pro-governmentNone1985–1988{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-governmentHong Kong Affairs Society1988–1991{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-governmentUnited Democrats1991–1994{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingCivil Force1994–1997{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingCivil Force1997–1999{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingCivil Force2000–2003{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingCivil Force2004–2007{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingCivil Force2008–2011{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingCivil Force → NPP/CF2012–2015{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingNPP/CF2016–2019{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-democracyCivic → Democratic2020–2023{{Composition_bar/advanced

Political makeup

Elections are held every four years. As of October 19, 2020:

Political partyCouncil membersCurrent
members1994199920032007201120152019
Independent (politician)}}Independent116876719
Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}}Democratic8373576
Civic Party}}Civic---0007
DAB}}DAB0928971
Labour Party (Hong Kong)}}Labour-----11
League of Social Democrats}}LSD---0001
Sha Tin Community Vision}}STCV------1
BPAHK}}BPA-----0-

District result maps

File:1994DBelectionmapr.svg|1994 File:1999DCelectionmapr.svg|1999 File:2003DCelectionmapr.svg|2003 File:2007DCelectionmapr.svg|2007 File:2011DCelectionmapr.svg|2011 File:Sha Tin District Council 2015.svg|2015 File:Sha Tin District Council (2019).svg|2019

Members represented

Leadership

Chairs

Since 1985, the chairman is elected by all the members of the board:

ChairmanYearsPolitical Affiliation
Nonpartisan}}"P. H. Hase1981–1982
Nonpartisan}}"Donald Tsang Yam-kuen1982–1984
Nonpartisan}}"Paul Tang Kwok-wai1984–1985
Nonpartisan}}"Ng Chan-lam1985–1991
United Democrats of Hong Kong}}"Choy Kan-pui1991–1999
Civil Force}}"Wai Kwok-hung2000–2011
Civil Force}}"Ho Hau-cheung2012–2019
DPHK}}"Ching Cheung-ying2020–2021
Nonpartisan}}"Mak Yun- Pui2021-2023

Vice Chairs

Vice ChairmanYearsPolitical Affiliation
DABHK}}"Thomas Pang Cheung-wai2000–2019
Community Sha Tin}}"Wong Hok-lai2020–2021
DPHK}}"Kelvin Sin Cheuk-nam2021–2023

Notes

References

References

  1. (2015-12-18). "【泛民怎樣光復一區 2】三十年河東 莫欺少年窮". 立場新聞.
  2. (2016-01-09). "【建制僅比泛民多一席】沙田區議會 39議員全部加入所有委員會". 立場新聞.
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