2019 anti-extradition protests and electoral landslide Since the
transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong in 1997, the
democratic movement had been calling for genuine universal suffrage for the
Chief Executive, the
Legislative Council (LegCo) as enshrined in the
Article 45 and the Article 68 of the
Basic Law of Hong Kong. The
National People's Congress Standing Committee (NPCSC) had repeatedly ruled out universal suffrage, first in 2004 and again in 2007. However, in the 2007 decision, NPCSC stated that the universal suffrage might be implemented in the
2017 Chief Executive election. With the 2012 electoral system being unchanged, the moderate democrats struck a deal with the Beijing authorities in the
2012 constitutional reform package in 2010 which allowed the enlargement of the
Election Committee (EC) and the creation of the five new
District Council (Second) seats to be nominated by the
District Councillors and elected by popular vote. The breakthrough between the pro-democrats and the Beijing authorities did not quell the demand for universal suffrage. Instead it created internal strife and fragmentations between different factions in the pro-democracy camp and the rise of
localist movement which called for more confrontational approach. The
decision on the constitutional reform framework laid by the NPCSC on 31 August 2014 dashed the hopes of the democracy activists striving for the right to direct elections, which triggered the
79-day Occupy protests. The democratic development in Hong Kong had stagnated since then, while a new wave of
independence movement was on the rise. In the
2016 New Territories East by-election, pro-independence activist
Edward Leung received over 15 per cent of the popular vote despite his loss to the pro-democratic
Civic Party's
Alvin Yeung. Leung and other pro-independence activists were then
barred from running in the
September general election.
Baggio Leung and
Yau Wai-ching of
Youngspiration, who was backed by Edward Leung, were elected, but were soon disqualified over
their oath-taking manner. . With pro-democrats infighting,
Occupy activists imprisoned and the pro-independence movement suppressed, the democratic movement seemed to run out of steam. Then in the summer of 2019, Chief Executive
Carrie Lam’s push for the
amendment to the extradition law triggered a series of
unprecedented widespread protests. The protesters soon demanded genuine universal suffrage as one of their
five key goals.
National security law and "patriots governing Hong Kong" In June 2020, the NPCSC enacted the
Hong Kong national security law to criminalise "separatism, subversion, terrorism and foreign interference" which many interpreted as a crackdown on civil liberties, government critics, and the independence movement. In July, the pro-democrats organised a
territory-wide primary election to maximise their chance to obtain a majority in the
upcoming Legislative Council election, despite the government warning of their potentially breaching the new national security law as some of the candidates vowed to vote down the government budget in order to pressure the administration to respond to the demands of the protesters. Chief Executive Carrie Lam abruptly invoked the
Emergency Regulations Ordinance to postpone the election, citing the
recent resurgence of the COVID-19 cases. However the decision was widely seen as the latest in a rapid series of aggressive moves by the Beijing authorities to thwart opposition momentum and neutralise the pro-democracy movement. The 55 organisers and candidates in the primary
were later arrested under the national security law on 6 January 2021, making it the largest crackdown under the national security law since its passage.
Xi Jinping stated that Hong Kong could only maintain its long-term stability and security by ensuring "patriots governing Hong Kong". After the passage of the national security law, the Beijing authorities began to stress the importance of "patriots governing Hong Kong." On 11 November 2020, the NPCSC adopted a decision. The decision barred Legislative Council members from supporting Hong Kong independence, refusing to recognise Beijing's sovereignty over Hong Kong, seeking help from "foreign countries or foreign forces to interfere in the affairs of the region", or committing "other acts that endanger national security". It also unseated the four sitting legislators, Alvin Yeung,
Kwok Ka-ki,
Dennis Kwok and
Kenneth Leung, whose candidacies had been
invalidated by the returning officers earlier in July.
Zhang Xiaoming, deputy director of the
Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office (HKMAO) stated that "patriots governing Hong Kong" had become a new "legal norm". He urged the "comprehensive and accurate understanding and implementation" of the principle of "
One Country, Two Systems". He stressed that one should see that "One Country" of the
socialist system with Chinese characteristics under the leadership of the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) being the premise and foundation for "Two Systems" which support and guarantee Hong Kong's capitalist system; safeguarding national sovereignty, security and development interests being the primary purpose of "One Country, Two Systems"; the central government's overall jurisdiction being the source of a high degree of autonomy; Hong Kong's legal system being incorporated into the constitutional order on the basis of the
National Constitution and the Basic Law; Hong Kong's development being inseparable from and benefited from the mainland; and "patriotism" should be added before the core values of democracy, freedom and human rights. On 27 January 2021,
CCP general secretary Xi Jinping said that Hong Kong could only maintain its long-term stability and security by ensuring "patriots governing Hong Kong" when he heard a work report delivered by Carrie Lam. On 1 March, HKMAO director
Xia Baolong in the seminar of "patriots governing Hong Kong" stated that Hong Kong must establish a "democratic electoral system with Hong Kong characteristics." ==NPC decision==