Pro-democracy supporters criticise the functional constituency system for giving a minority too much power and influence. The right of corporations and legal entities to vote is also controversial, as it gives some individuals multiple votes. For example, in 1998,
Sino Group chairman
Robert Ng and companies he controlled held roughly 3-4% of the votes in the real estate constituency, according to an analysis by the
Hong Kong Human Rights Monitor; they described this as being equivalent in voting power to 15,940 people in a geographical constituency. In most functional constituencies, the entire body of eligible voters comprises legal entities that are not natural persons. This is known as corporate voting. In 2009, there were applications for
judicial review to challenge the legality of corporate voting on the grounds that it contravened the right to vote enshrined in Article 26 of the
Basic Law or was discriminatory in nature. Mr. Justice
Andrew Cheung (as the Chief Justice then was) dismissed the applications, emphasising that his judgment was solely concerned with the
constitutionality of corporate voting rather than the political wisdom of corporate voting or functional constituencies. There have been calls to abolish the functional constituencies from pan democrats. The
May 2010 by-election was triggered by the resignation of 5 pan-democrats from the
Legislative Council who put themselves up for re-election to the Legislative Council. The 'Five Constituencies Referendum' concept to use a by-election as a de facto referendum on universal suffrage and the abolition of functional constituencies was hatched by the League of Social Democrats.
Reform proposals Following the consultations on the
2009 political reform package, where an additional five legislative seats for District Councils were proposed (in addition to Geographical seats) the government unveiled the revised package in mid-April 2010. It was proposed that the five additional Legco seats for the district council constituencies will be elected by proportional representation instead of block voting. With the proposals looking likely to be vetoed, the Democratic Party said they would support the measures if the five new District Council functional seats, and the one existing seat, would return candidates nominated by district councillors and elected by all registered voters. == See also ==