Elections for unofficial members of the
Urban Council were held beginning 1888. Suffrage was restricted to residents on the special and common jury lists between 1888 and 1973. In 1973, the electoral franchise for the
Urban Council was widened to residents above 21 years of age who have lived in Hong Kong for at least three years that qualified in at least one of 23 specified categories, which included educational qualifications (School Certificate Examination or equivalent), being a juror, salaried taxpayer, or a member of certain professional organisations as listed in Schedule 1 of the Urban Council Ordinance (Cap. 101,
Laws of Hong Kong). Half of the members of the Urban Council were elected, but by a minority of the population. It was estimated that in 1970 there were 250,000 eligible voters and in 1981 the number had increased to 400,000 – 500,000. Prominent elected Urban Councillors included
Elsie Tu and
Brook Bernacchi of the
Reform Club.
Expansion of elected offices The
Green Paper: A Pattern of District Administration in Hong Kong was published on 6 June 1980 for public consultations on reforming local administration in Hong Kong. The Green Paper recommended that elections by popular vote be introduced to return some members of the newly established
District Boards and unofficial members of the Urban Council. The
White Paper: District Administration in Hong Kong of January 1981 further cemented the government's will to introduce elections by popular vote. Proposals in the White Paper were implemented between 1982 and 1983, during which elections to the
District Boards and
Urban Council were held. Months before the
Sino-British Joint Declaration was signed which the United Kingdom and the People's Republic of China governments agreed on handing over Hong Kong from British to Chinese rule in 1997, the
Green Paper: the Further Development of Representative Government in Hong Kong was published in July 1984. The Green Paper cemented first large-scale constitutional reform in developing a representative government during the British rule. The Green Paper suggested the introduction of
indirect election in two stages in 1985 and 1988 to the
unofficial members of the
Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo) by an
electoral college consisting of Members of the
Urban Council of Hong Kong, the new
Regional Council to be established in 1986, and
District Boards and functional groups or
functional constituencies. The
first Legislative Council elections, electing 24 unofficial members of LegCo, was held in September 1985.
Popular elections to the legislature Consultations on electoral reform followed the
1985 electoral reform. In the
White Paper: the Further Development of Representative Government in Hong Kong of 1984, the idea of direct election was suggested to be reviewed in the development of representative government in 1987. In May 1987, the government published the 1987
Green Paper: Review of Developments in Representative Government to consider the next stage of development of representative government. Despite strong public opinion in the consultations supporting the introduction of direct elections, the Government concluded that no clear consensus on the timing or the extent of the introduction of direct elections emerged. The subsequent
White Paper: the Development of Representative Government: The Way Forward delayed the first direct elections to the
Legislative Council from 1988 to the
1991 elections. A total of 18 members were returned from
geographical constituencies by popular vote, out of a total of 60 LegCo members. As
Chris Patten succeeded
David Wilson to become the last
Governor of Hong Kong,
extensive electoral reform proposals were announced in Patten's inaugural Policy Address. The minimum voting age was lowered from 21 to 18, and all appointed seats on the Urban Council, Regional Council and District Boards were to be abolished by 1995.
Single-member constituencies were to be introduced to geographical constituencies of the Legislative Council, elected seats of the Urban Council, elected seats of the Regional Council and elected seats of District Boards. Patten significantly broadened the electoral franchise to the
first fully-elected Legislative Council returned in 1995, the composition of which conformed with
Basic Law provisions on the composition of the
1st Legislative Council of Hong Kong SAR. Patten lobbied the Legislative Council (Electoral Provisions) (Amendment) Bill 1994 which broadened the franchise of certain existing functional constituencies by replacing corporate voting with individual voting. Nine new functional constituency seats were established, allowing about 2.7 million people to have the right to vote in functional constituencies. An Election Committee composed of district board members returned ten members to the Legislative Council. In response to Patten's reforms, Beijing cancelled the "through-train arrangement" which would have allowed the last Legislative Council in the colonial era to be sworn in as the
1st Legislative Council of Hong Kong SAR after the
transfer of sovereignty to China in 1997. The Preparatory Committee for the Hong Kong SAR under Chinese
National People's Congress established the
Provisional Legislative Council on 26 January 1996 that served as Hong Kong's interim legislature until July 1998.
Post-handover development The
Provisional Legislative Council (PLC) installed by the Beijing government during the intense Sino-British confrontation over the
democratic reform decided on the electoral system of the post-handover Legislative Council. For geographical constituencies,
proportional representation using the
largest remainder method with
Hare quota was adopted by the SAR government in replacement of the
first-past-the-post system introduced in 1995. The system was designed to reward the weaker
pro-Beijing candidates and dilute the electoral strength of the majority
democrats. For functional constituencies, corporate voting was restored after it was abolished in 1995. It reduced the number of eligible voters by almost 90 per cent, from over 1.1 million in 1995 to fewer than 140,000 in 1998. The elected
Urban Council and
Regional Council were also abolished by
Tung Chee-hwa's government. The
first legislative election in the HKSAR was held in 1998, with 20 members returned by
geographical constituencies through direct elections, 10 members returned by the 800-member
Election Committee and 30 members returned by
functional constituencies (FC). The number of LegCo members returned from
geographical constituencies (GC) increased from 20 to 24 in
2000 and to 30 in
2004, constituting half of the legislature. Seats returned by
Election Committee were abolished by 2004. The first Chief Executive election after the
transfer of sovereignty was held in
2002. Incumbent
Tung Chee-hwa was elected uncontested. Subsequent Chief Executives were returned by the
Election Committee, members of which were elected by members of specified associations or professions.
Demand for universal suffrage Before the
2021 Hong Kong electoral changes, the
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region had the power to initiate amendments of Annexes I and II of the
Basic Law to change its electoral system. From late 2003 on, the Government and the public had been drawing out plans of democratisation to realise the ultimate aim of electing a chief executive by universal suffrage after nomination by an ad hoc committee (Basic Law, Art. 45) and electing the whole Legislative Council by universal suffrage (Basic Law, Art. 68). On 6 April 2004, the
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) issued its second interpretation on the
Basic Law, indicating that electoral reforms are possible in 2007 and stipulating the “five steps” of initiating political reform under Annex I of the Basic Law. On 26 April 2004, the NPCSC further passed a decision that negated universal suffrage for CE elections in 2007 and LegCo elections in 2008, but provided for electoral reforms withstanding a 50:50 ratio between GC and FC seats. The Legislative Council vetoed the Motions put by the HKSAR Government to the LegCo concerning
amendment to the methods for selecting the CE in 2007 and for forming LegCo. In late 2007, the
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) decided that the universal suffrage for the
Chief Executive can be achieved in 2017 or later, and universal suffrage for the Legislative Council can be achieved after the former has been. The NPCSC decision also provided for electoral reforms in 2012 withstanding a 50:50 ratio between GC and FC seats. The Legislative Council approved of the
Motions concerning the amendment to the methods for selecting the CE and for forming LegCo in 2012. Amidst the
2014–2015 Hong Kong electoral reform on universal suffrage in 2017, the NPCSC has outlined a screening mechanism of Chief Executive candidates, in which Chief Executive candidates must first receive nominations by an absolute majority of a Nominating Committee before proceeding to popular vote. The
Hong Kong Government's bill for universal suffrage in Chief Executive elections was subsequently rejected. With the
NPCSC's amendment of Annexes I and II of the Basic Law in 2021, the NPCSC has retracted the power of the HKSAR to initiate political reform. The Chinese NPCSC now exercises the sole power to amend Annexes I and II of the Basic Law. In lieu of recent efforts by China to hamper the pro-democracy camp, universal suffrage remains unlikely in the foreseeable future. The evolution of elected offices in Hong Kong returned by popular vote is as follows: ==Voter registration and nomination==