There were total of 11 subsectors being uncontested, most of them are in the First Sector where the business interests are rooted. Nevertheless, the election became much more competitive as supporters of both
Henry Tang and
Leung Chun-ying, the two potential candidates for the 2012 Chief Executive race, tried to gain as much seats. The
pan-democracy camp secured the 150-member threshold to nominate a candidate to challenge to pro-Beijing dominated Chief Executive election in the following year.
Catering sub-sector The Catering sub-sector was contested by two candidate lists the Cater17, led by the
Catering Legislative Councillor
Tommy Cheung Yu-yan and considered Henry Tang's supporters, and 星火行動, led by Simon Wong Ka-wo and considered Leung Chun-ying's supporters. Total of 34 candidates from the two lists equally contested for 17 seats. The Cater17 list won all 17 seats. Notable elected candidates include
Allan Zeman, chairman of the
Ocean Park Hong Kong.
Accountancy sub-sector Many groups contested in the Accountancy sub-sector. The A16 Alliance was formed by accountants from the
Big Four firms, the group was considered as Henry Tang's camp. 15 of the 16 candidates were elected with
Eric Li got the highest votes. Two groups called "Your Vote Counts" and "Y5 Give Me Five" were supported by member of the Leung Chun-ying's election campaign office and
Accountancy Legislative Councillor
Paul Chan. "Your Vote Counts" got two of the six candidates elected and "Y5 Give Me Five" got two of the five. The group got two members elected.
Education sub-sector The Education sub-sector has been the stronghold of pan-democracy camp. The pro-democratic
Hong Kong Professional Teachers' Union put out a 25-candidate list for the 30 seats in the sub-sector in which five of them are also the
Democratic Party members. All candidates were elected including
Ip Kin-yuen, who won the
Education functional constituency seat in the
Legislative Council election in the following year. The pro-Beijing
Hong Kong Federation of Education Workers got only one seat. The Education Convergence had 6 candidates and 3 of them were also elected. Many of them are with party membership such as
Joseph Cheng Yu-shek,
Kenneth Chan Ka-lok, and
Kuan Hsin-chi are from the Civic Party,
Helena Wong Pik-wan from the Democratic Party, and two from the
Neo Democrats including
Chan King-ming.
Information Technology sub-sector IT Voice 2012 is an election coalition for the Information Technology sub-sector election formed by a group of pan democrats including
Sin Chung-kai and
Charles Mok. All 20 candidates were elected. The pro-Beijing ICT Energy including
DAB member
Elizabeth Quat got only 8 of the 24 members elected. The Other two elected candidates without affiliation included
Ricky Wong.
Legal sub-sector 22 pro-democratic independent candidates led by former chairman of the
Hong Kong Bar Association Edward Chan King-sang formed the "ProDem22" and 8 candidates from the Democratic Party, Civic Party, and the
Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood formed the "PanDem8" while the vice-chairman of the
Law Society of Hong Kong Ambrose Lam San-keung led another 12 candidates group "Vox Pop" which was considered pro-Beijing. The 30 pan democrat candidates were able to collect all seats while "Vox Pop" failed to get any seat.
Medical sub-sector The Medical sub-sector was the most competitive subsector in the election with total 83 candidates running for 30 seats. The Hong Kong Medical Association filled in 30 candidates and half of them got elected. A list led by
Ko Wing-man got 2 of the seven candidates elected. The Public Surgeons' United also got 2 of the 8 candidates elected while the Hong Kong Public Doctors' Association failed to win a seat. The 5 members pro-democratic group won 2 seats including the former Legislative Councillor for the
Medical functional constituency Kwok Ka-ki.
Religious sub-sector 10 Election committee members are nominated by the
Hong Kong Christian Council (HKCC), which was enlisted as the designated body for the Christian (
Protestant) Sub-subsector. HKCC decided to adopt the "one Christian, one vote" method. The voting date was 30 October 2011. A total of 42 candidates were nominated. 17,380 of the 18,051 votes were counted as effective while there were 554 void votes and 117 blank votes. The result was considered as a landslide victory of the pro-Beijing faction.
Social Welfare sub-sector The Social Welfare sub-sector was another stronghold of the pan-democracy camp. The Demo-Social 60 filled in 31 candidates in which many of them are the Democratic Party members such as
Law Chi-kwong and
Yeung Sum. 29 candidates were elected. The pro-democratic social workers' union
Hong Kong Social Workers' General Union also had 29 candidates in which 28 of them were elected. A smaller pro-democratic group Progressive Social Work also had 2 of the 8 candidates elected. The pro-Beijing Welfare Empower Hong Kong failed to win any seat.
District Councils sub-sectors The pro-Beijing camp won a landslide victory in the Hong Kong and Kowloon District Councils sub-sector and the New Territories District Councils sub-sector following the major success in the
District Council elections in November. The DAB became the largest winner with 55 seats, 26 in the Hong Kong and Kowloon District Councils sub-sector and 29 in the New Territories District Councils sub-sector. The pan-democracy candidates list failed to win any seat. ==See also==