Political party The HKDF was established on 27 October 1989 and was inaugurated on 11 January 1990 by
Jimmy McGregor and Dr
Leong Che-hung as a political party. It consisted of business people and professionals who endorsed democratic ideals but wanted to keep their distance from the
United Democrats of Hong Kong, formed in 1990 by the
pro-democratic activists. The HKDF had four seats in the
Legislative Council when it was founded: Mr Jimmy McGregor, Dr Leong Che-hung, Ms
Leung Wai-tung and Mr
Chan Ying-lun. Dr C.H.Leong chaired the HKDF when it was founded but the chairmanship was soon passed on to another medical doctor, Dr Patrick Shiu Kin-ying in April 1992, who served as HKDF's second chairman until 1997. The HKDF contested the
first legislative council direct election in 1991 but won two seats. Dr C.H.Leong later left the HKDF to join
Meeting Point, which later merged with the United Democrats of Hong Kong to form the pro-democracy flagship party
Democratic Party, but Dr C.H. Leong did not join the Democratic Party. The HKDF later lost the last seat in the Legislative Council when Jimmy McGregor stopped contesting the
Commercial (First), the
Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce's
functional constituency election in September 1995. Jimmy McGregor was later appointed to Governor
Chris Patten's
Executive Council in October 1995, but he stayed with the HKDF as a senior member and mentor until his retirement to Canada in 1997. HKDF members admit that McGregor probably had more influence than others on shaping HKDF's political, economic and public service philosophy.
Think tank The HKDF started its full-scale transformation to become a political and public policy think tank when Alan Lung Ka-lun took over as its third chairman from Patrick Shiu Kin-ying in 1997. Alan stepped down in September 2015 and he was succeeded by
Paul Zimmerman, a naturalised Chinese citizen of HKSAR. Today, the HKDF positions itself as an independent, multi-racial, multi-cultural political think tank, focusing on the development and promotion of policies and the primary activity is to seek to influence Hong Kong's
economic, political and
social development. It says that it aims to accomplish those goals through the production of
position papers on relevant topics; developed within the framework of its policies and principles. The HKDF does have a long record in hosting constitutional reform seminars and proposing
constitutional reform packages . It also holds monthly luncheons addressed by highly distinguished guest speakers on topics of interest to members and useful to its policy development. Additionally, it holds meetings with experts, legislators and organisations for the exchange of ideas and the promotion of its proposals. ==Chairmen==