Sino-British agreement and drafting of the Basic Law In the late 1970s, the
reform and opening up launched by paramount leader of the Chinese Communist government
Deng Xiaoping and the approaching of the question over the Hong Kong's sovereignty after 1997 opened the opportunity for the emergence of the contemporary liberalism in Hong Kong. In the late 1970s
Governor Murray MacLehose carried out massive social reforms and also expanded the local representation of the colonial government and the district administration, which saw the establishment of the elected local advisory institutes
District Boards and the territory-wide franchise of the
Urban Council. While the Beijing authorities insisted China shall resume its sovereignty over Hong Kong after 1997,
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher insisted that the legality of the Treaty of Nanking must be upheld. Some Hong Kong liberal intellectuals saw it as an opportunity to change the colonial status quo to a democratic and fairer society. This view was held by
Tsang Shu-ki, a prominent thinker in the social activist circle at the time. In January 1983, the liberals forming the
Meeting Point favoured Chinese rule with the slogan of the new
Three Principles of People, "Nation, Democracy and People's Livelihood." It became one of the earliest groups in Hong Kong that favoured Chinese sovereignty, but they also wanted a free, democratic and autonomous Hong Kong. The
Sino-British Joint Declaration of 1984 guaranteed Hong Kong would retain a high degree of autonomy under Chinese rule with the preservation of the maintained Western lifestyle in Hong Kong. Deng Xiaoping also emphasised the principle of "Hong Kong's people ruling Hong Kong." Starting from 1984, the colonial government began the process of
decolonisation by gradually introducing
representative democracy into Hong Kong. The reform proposals were first carried out in the
Green Paper: the Further Development of Representative Government in July 1984 which allowed 24 seats in the Legislative Council to be
indirectly elected by electoral college in 1985. During the period, many liberal political groups were formed to contest the electoral politics in different levels. By the late 1980s, the Meeting Point led by
Yeung Sum, the
Hong Kong Affairs Society led by
Albert Ho formed in 1985, and the
Hong Kong Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood (HKADPL) led by
Frederick Fung became the three major liberal political forces active in elections. The liberals also formed the
Joint Committee on the Promotion of Democratic Government (JCPDG) to demand a faster pace of democratisation and to introduce direct elections in the
1988 Legislative Council. It was led by the two most prominent liberal icons,
Martin Lee and
Szeto Wah, who were elected to the Legislative Council and were also appointed by Beijing into the
Hong Kong Basic Law Drafting Committee (BLDC), to draft the provisional constitution of the Hong Kong government after 1997. To counter the liberal emergence, the business elites formed a
conservative coalition with the pro-Communist
Beijing loyalists, which warned of the rise of populism and disruption to the prosperity and stability if democratisation was to implement too quick. In the BLDC, the liberal faction, the
Group of 190 also faced the conservative
Group of 89, who favoured a less democratic system after 1997. Hong Kong became increasingly politicised in the latter half of the 1980s with two rival blocs debating on the pace of democratisation as well as various political and social issues.
Tiananmen protest and the liberal zenith , a prominent figure of the
Hong Kong democracy movement The liberals supported the democratic cause of the
Tiananmen protests of 1989 and formed the
Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China (HKASPDMC) to provide material supports to the student protesters in Beijing. Several solidarity demonstrations in May 1989 also attended by up to a million Hong Kong residents. The star-dubbed
Concert for Democracy in China also raised more than over HK$12 million for the students in Beijing. The bloody crackdown on the protest on 4 June 1989 shocked the general public in Hong Kong and triggered a crisis of confidence in Hong Kong's future under Chinese rule, leading to the massive emigration waves on eve of the
handover of Hong Kong. Prominent liberal leaders Martin Lee and Szeto Wah resigned from the BLDC as an act of protest against the Beijing government after the massacre and the warm relationship between Beijing and pro-democrats have broken off since. The democrats have held the
annual Tiananmen vigils every year and called for the end of
one-party rule in China which was seen as "treason" and "subversive" by the Beijing authorities. The widespread fear of the Communist regime and the support for democracy also consolidated the popular foundation of the pro-democracy camp. In the
first Legislative Council direct election in 1991, the liberals united under the banner of the
United Democrats of Hong Kong (UDHK) which became the first major political party in Hong Kong's history. The UDHK and Meeting Point alliance and other pro-democratic independents including
Emily Lau swept the votes by winning 16 of the 18 direct elected seats. To counter the liberal rise in the legislature, the conservative business elites formed the
Liberal Party in 1993 which positioned itself as the defender of
economically liberal values such as free market and free enterprise but took
political conservative positions against democratisation. The arrival of the last governor
Chris Patten, the former chairman of the
British Conservative Party, also brought a paradigm shift on Hong Kong politics. Despite Beijing's strong opposition, he put forward the progressive
constitutional reform proposals to enfranchise 2.7 million new voters and lower the voting age from 21 to 18. Safeguarded by the liberal majority, the Patten proposals were passed in the Legislative Council after unprecedented political wrangling despite the Beijing's attempt to defeat the bill by allying the business elites. In the
substantially more democratic elections in 1995, the
Democratic Party, formed out of the merger of the United Democrats and the Meeting Point movement received another landslide victory, winning half of the Legislative Council seats. Many liberal pieces of legislation were able to pass in the final years of colonial rule, such as decriminalising same-sex acts, abolishing death penalty and the
Hong Kong Bill of Rights Ordinance. Given the booming Hong Kong economy, the colonial government also mildly expanded social welfare and public housing. At the time, there were also new liberal parties being set up, such as the radical
The Frontier, led by Emily Lau, and the
Citizens Party, led by
Christine Loh. In response to the Patten proposals, the Beijing government set up the
Provisional Legislative Council (PLC) which was seen as unconstitutional by the pro-democrats. The pro-democrats, except for the HKADPL, boycotted the PLC and stepped down as legislators during the last days of colonial rule. The pro-democrats ran again in the
first legislative elections of the SAR period. Although the pro-democrats continuously received about 55 to 60 per cent of the popular vote in every election held since 1997, their influence was contained and hampered by the indirectly elected trade-based
functional constituencies. ==Democratic stagnation in the early handover period ==