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Tuen Mun District Council

District council in Hong Kong

Tuen Mun District Council

Summary

District council in Hong Kong

FieldValue
nameTuen Mun District Council
native_name
coa_picTuen Mun District Council logo.svg
coa_res180px
house_typeHong Kong District Council
jurisdictionTuen Mun District
foundation(District Board)
(Provisional)
(District Council)
leader1_typeChair
leader1Michael Kwan Ke-lin
party1Independent
leader2_typeVice-Chair
leader2Vacant
members32 councillors
consisting of
6 elected member
12 district committee member
13 appointed members
1 ex-officio members
seats3_titleDAB
seats3
seats4_titleFTU
seats4
seats5_titleBPA
seats5
seats6_titleNPP
seats6
seats7_titleIndependent
seats7
voting_system1First past the post
last_election110 December 2023
session_roomFile:Tuen Mun Government Offices 201207.jpg
meeting_place2/F, Tuen Mun Government Offices, 1 Tuen Hi Road, Tuen Mun, New Territories
website

| coa-pic = | coa-res = (Provisional) (District Council) consisting of 6 elected member 12 district committee member 13 appointed members 1 ex-officio members

The Tuen Mun District Council (; noted as TM) is the District Council of Tuen Mun District, in the New Territories. It is one of 18 such councils. The Council consists of 32 members with 6 members of those elected through first past the post system every four years, 12 district committee members, 13 appointed members, and 1 ex officio member who is the Tuen Mun Rural Committee chairman. The latest election was held on 10 December 2023.

History

The Tuen Mun District Council was established on 1 April 1981 under the name of the Tuen Mun 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 Tuen Mun Rural Committee chairman, as well as members appointed by the Governor until 1994 when last Governor Chris Patten refrained from appointing any member. Rural leaders and indigenous inhabitants like Lau Wong-fat had dominated local political scene in the early and mid-1980s.

The Tuen Mun District Board became Tuen Mun 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 Tuen Mun 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, Tuen Mun was a strategic target for emerging pro-democracy activists, notably the Meeting Point. Ng Ming-yum was first elected in the 1985 election with the highest votes in the territory and was re-elected with high votes in 1988 and 1991 and later on elected to the Legislative Council in 1991. Another pro-democracy party Hong Kong Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood (ADPL) and pro-Taipei 123 Democratic Alliance also established their bases in the 1990s. In the 1994 election, the pro-democracy and pro-Taipei together gained the control of the council.

The Tuen Mun District Council is also dominated by the rural forces. Long-time Heung Yee Kuk chairman Lau Wong-fat was the long-time chairman of the council from 1985 up until 2011, and again from 2011 to 2015, on the capacity of Tuen Mun Rural Committee chairman. In 1994 when the pro-democrat and pro-Taipei councillors controlled the board, the 123 Democratic Alliance defected and elected Lau to be the chairman. Lau chairmanship was interrupted in 2011 when his rural committee chairmanship was taken away by Junius Ho. Leung Kin-man of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB), which rapidly developed its base in the district after the handover, took the chairmanship briefly and again became the council chairman since 2015.

The Democratic Party chairman Albert Ho was a long time councillor in the district, representing Lok Tsui, until he was defeated in the 2015 District Council election when he was ousted by Junius Ho, which eliminated Albert Ho's eligibility to run in the District Council (Second) constituency for the Legislative Council. The Democratic Party also suffered a huge defeat in the district, dropping their seats from seven to four.

Amid the massive pro-democracy protests in 2019, Junius Ho who was a key anti-protest figure who was allegedly involved in the Yuen Long attack was challenged by Democratic Party's Lo Chun-yu in his constituency in the November election, with Lo's party winning eight seats. A historic landslide victory occurred as the pro-democrats took 28 of the 31 seats in the council with Ho being unseated. A localist political group Tuen Mun Community Network also grabbed four seats as a result.

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-governmentPCPHP1985–1988{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-governmentMeeting Point1988–1991{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-governmentUnited Democrats1991–1994{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-democracyDemocratic1994–1997{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingDemocratic1997–1999{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingDemocratic2000–2003{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingDAB2004–2007{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingDAB2008–2011{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingDAB2012–2015{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingDAB2016–2019{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-democracy→No overall controlDemocratic → ADPL2020–2023{{Composition_bar/advanced
Pro-BeijingDAB2024–2027{{Composition_bar/advanced

Political makeup

Elections are held every four years.

Political partyCouncil membersCurrent
members1994199920032007201120152019
Independent (politician)}}Independent3668855
Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}}Democratic9997748
HKADPL}}"ADPL4442235
Tuen Mun Community Network}}"TMCN------4
Labour Party (Hong Kong)}}"Labour-----12
Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong}}"DAB279111281
Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions}}"FTU-----41
BPAHK}}"BPA------1
Empowering Hong Kong}}"EHK------1
Lung Mun Concern Group}}"LMCG------1

District result maps

File:1994DBelectionmapl.svg|1994 File:1999DCelectionmapl.svg|1999 File:2003DCelectionmapl.svg|2003 File:2007DCelectionmapl.svg|2007 File:2011DCelectionmapl.svg|2011 File:Tuen Mun District Council 2015.svg|2015 File:Tuen Mun 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}}"Billy C. L. Lam1981–1983
Nonpartisan}}"Ricky C. C. Fung1983–1985
Heung Yee Kuk}}"Lau Wong-fat1985–2011
DABHK}}"Leung Kin-man2011
Economic Synergy}}"Lau Wong-fat2012–2015
DABHK}}"Leung Kin-man2016–2019
DPHK}}"Josephine Chan Shu-ying2020–2021
HKFTU}}"Chan Yau-hoi2021–2023
Nonpartisan}}"Michael Kwan Ke-lin2024–present

Vice Chairs

Vice ChairmanYearsPolitical Affiliation
DABHK}}"Leung Kin-man2000–2011
Independent (politician)}}"Lau Chi-pang2011
DABHK}}"Leung Kin-man2012–2015
HKFTU}}"Lothar Lee Hung-sham2016–2019
Independent (politician)}}"Wong Tan-ching2020–2023

Notes

References

References

  1. (1984). "District Board Elections in Hong Kong". Journal of Commonwealth & Comparative Politics.
  2. 田弘茂, 朱雲漢, 葉明德. (1996). "一九九七過渡與臺港關係". 業强出版社.
  3. (15 October 2015). "Hong Kong district council elections see record number of candidates in first citywide polls since Occupy movement". South China Morning Post.
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