Tam became the head of
National People's Congress Hong Kong delegation from March 2013. On the matter of the universal suffrage of the Chief Executive, Tam said the United Nations'
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights indicated that the right to be elected is not universal. She also suggested that an interpretation of the Basic Law by Beijing could be the last option for determining how universal suffrage could be implemented for the
2017 Chief Executive election. In the
2014 constitutional reform debate, Tam actively opposed the pro-democrats' campaign for the "public nomination" of the Chief Executive, saying that was against the Basic Law, which states that candidates shall be put forward by a nominating committee. She received the
Grand Bauhinia Medal (GBM), the highest award under the HKSAR honours and awards system, on 1 July 2013. In 2015, Tam was appointed chairman of the Operations Review Committee of the
Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) by Chief Executive
Leung Chun-ying. Under her spell, high-flying head of investigations Rebecca Li Bo-lan was controversially sacked. The sudden dismissal came during Li's enquiry into possible impropriety relating to a
$50 million payment made to Leung Chun-ying. In 2017, Tam was the founding president of the Junior Police Officers’ Association fund which raised over HK$10 million for the families of the seven police officers who were convicted and jailed for two years for
beating activist Ken Tsang Kin-chiu at the height of the
Occupy protests in 2014. In November 2020, following the expulsion of 4 pro-democracy lawmakers from the Legislative Council, Tam said that
NPCSC decisions are not challengeable, and that any judicial review would almost certainly fail. Tam supported the arrests of 53 pro-democracy figures in January 2021, and when asked about whether they were doing something illegal, she responded "All I can tell is that it is not 'nothing.' There is something. It is only a matter of whether more evidence is there." In February 2021, following the
2020 Hong Kong Legislative Council mass resignations, Tam claimed that there were not enough members of the Legislative Council to decide on reforms of the electoral system, and therefore the
NPCSC would take charge of such reforms. In December 2021, during the
2021 Hong Kong legislative election, Tam played down the record-low voter turnout. Tam said that the 30% voter turnout was "quite good" and within her expectations. In December 2022, after the NPCSC ruled that the Chief Executive could ban foreign lawyers from defending national security cases, in response to
Jimmy Lai attempting to hire
Tim Owen, Tam supported the NPCSC's decision and said Hong Kong courts were still independent and "no criticism were made against Hong Kong courts at all." In February 2023, Tam said that Hong Kong was "far more powerful and democratic" than when it was under British rule, and also said that "We have universal suffrage. We can impeach the chief executive. We have checks and balances in respect of the laws or the budget that's been put forward by the executive." ==See also==