Colonial period The Legislative Council of Hong Kong was set up in 1843 for the first time as a colonial legislature under British rule. Hong Kong's first constitution, The Legislative Council was initially set up as the advisory body to the governor, and for most of the time, consisted half of official members, who were the government officials seated in the council, and half of
unofficial members who were appointed by the
Governor. After the
Sino-British Joint Declaration was signed on 19 December 1984 (in which the United Kingdom agreed to the handover of Hong Kong to the
People's Republic of China on 1 July 1997), the Hong Kong government decided to start the process of democratisation based on the consultative document,
Green Paper: the Further Development of Representative Government in Hong Kong on 18 July 1984. The first elections to the Council
were held in 1985, followed by the
first direct elections of the Legislative Council held in 1991. The Legislative Council became a
fully elected legislature for the first time in 1995 and extensively expanded its functions and organisations throughout the last years of the colonial rule. The People's Republic of China government did not agree with
reforms to the Legislative Council enacted by the last Governor
Chris Patten in 1994. Therefore, it withdrew the previous so-called "through-train" policy that would have allowed for members elected to the colonial Legislative Council automatically becoming members of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) legislature. Instead, the Beijing government resolved to set up an alternative legislative council in preparation for the return of Hong Kong sovereignty from Britain to China. Before the 1997
handover of Hong Kong, rather than working through the
1995 elected colonial legislature, the government of China, through the
Preparatory Committee for the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), unilaterally established, in 1996, the
Provisional Legislative Council (PLC) in Shenzhen, under the
National People's Congress of the People's Republic of China. The Provisional Legislative Council, seen as unconstitutional by the British authorities and boycotted by most
pro-democracy legislators, was in operation from 25 January 1997 to 30 June 1998 and held its meetings in
Shenzhen until 30 June 1997, when the PLC moved to Hong Kong and replaced the elected legislature from the 1997
handover of Hong Kong until the
1998 Hong Kong legislative election. Since 2000, the terms of the Legislative Council have been four years, with the exception of the
6th Legislative Council.
Early SAR years The current HKSAR Legislative Council was established on 1 October 1998 under the
Hong Kong Basic Law. The first meeting of the council was held in July of the same year. Five subsequent Legislative Council elections have been held — the most recent being held on
4 September 2016. The
Democratic Party had briefly held the largest-party status in the early years of the SAR period, but its support was slowly eaten away by its pro-democracy allies such as
The Frontier and later the
Civic Party. In the
2004 election, the
pro-Beijing Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB) surpassed the Democrats as the largest party for the first time and has since held its superior status. Due to the indirectly elected trade-based
functional constituencies which largely favour business interests — represented by the
Liberal Party and subsequently the
Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong (BPA) — the pro-Beijing camp has been able to keep the majority in the legislature despite receiving fewer votes than the pro-democracy bloc in the direct elections. Article 68 of the
Hong Kong Basic Law states that the ultimate aim is the election of all the members of the Legislative Council by
universal suffrage. This and a
similar article dealing with election of the Chief Executive have made universal suffrage for the council and the Chief Executive a dominant issue in Hong Kong politics. In 2010, the
government's constitutional reform proposal became the first and only constitutional move to have been passed by the Legislative Council in the SAR era with the support of the Democratic Party after the Beijing government accepted the modified package as presented by the party, which increased the composition of the Legislative Council from 60 to 70 seats; adding five seats in the directly elected
geographical constituencies and five new
District Council (Second) functional constituency seats which are nominated by the
District Councillors and elected by all registered electorates. The
2014 Hong Kong electoral reform proposal, which suggested the electoral method of the Legislative Council remain unchanged, was vetoed in 2015, after a massive occupation protest demanding universal suffrage — often dubbed the "
Umbrella Revolution" — broke out in 2014. The
2016 New Territories East by-election and
September general election saw the
rise of localist tide where a number of pro-independence candidates were elected to the council. In November, in Beijing's fifth interpretation of the Basic Law since the 1997 handover, the
National People's Congress Standing Committee (NPCSC)
disqualified two pro-independence legislators from assuming public office pursuant to
Article 104. Four more pro-democracy and localist legislators were unseated in subsequent court cases. Returning officers also disqualified certain candidates who had advocated for Hong Kong self-determination, with or without option for independence, from running in the following by-elections; the government expressed support for such decisions.
"National security" overhaul The
2019 amendment of the extradition bill caused an historic political upheaval, where
intensive protests erupted throughout the city in the latter half of the year, including the
storming of the Legislative Council Complex on the 22nd anniversary of the handover of Hong Kong on 1 July. In July 2020, in light of the pro-democrats' attempt to seize the majority of the Legislative Council in the midst of the largely unpopular
Carrie Lam government, the government
postponed the seventh general election, citing the
COVID-19 spike. At variance with the four-year term set out in the Basic Law, the NPCSC decided in August that the sitting Legislative Council should continue with its duties for at least one year; however, the term of the upcoming LegCo would remain four years. In a November decision, the NPCSC disqualified LegCo members on grounds such as Hong Kong independence, Chinese sovereignty, and solicitation of foreign intervention, impacting four sitting legislators
whose candidacies had been invalidated in the postponed election. 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 reviewed a work report delivered by
Carrie Lam. In March 2021, China's
National People's Congress passed a
resolution that authorised an overhaul of Hong Kong's electoral system, including that of the Legislative Council. The reform would allow a new Candidate Eligibility Review Committee, composed entirely of principal officials from the Hong Kong government, to vet candidates for the Legislative Council and would increase its total number of seats from 70 to 90. The
7th Legislative Council term, beginning in January 2022 and the first after the China-imposed reform, was criticised for lacking meaningful debates. A survey in 2023 found that half of Hongkongers were unable to name any serving lawmaker, with another 12% naming somebody not a current lawmaker. The council also fast-tracked multiple legislations including
national security ordinance. In addition, at least 66% of bills passed were done with less than half of all Legislative Council members present, below the 50% attendance threshold for a quorum. The Chinese national emblem was installed in the chamber above the Hong Kong emblem for the first time. ==The Legislative Council Building==