On 8 January 2019, the
Executive Council drafted the national anthem bill and submitted it to the
Legislative Council (LegCo) two weeks later. After its first reading, the legislation process was successfully blocked by pro-democracy councillors, and later by months of social unrest caused by
2019–20 Hong Kong protests until its summer recess in July. After the start of the new session in October 2019,
Starry Lee, a pro-establishment councillor, stepped down from her position of the chairperson of the
House Committee in order to participate in re-election. Dennis Kwok, a legislator belonging to the Civic Party, thus presided over the committee as Deputy Chair. Pan-democratic legislators have since then employed a tactic some referred to as “
filibustering”, holding lengthy discussions on issues such as the extent of authority the police force has within the LegCo building or the operation of LegCo under
COVID-19, successfully delaying the re-election of chairperson. Since a chair must be elected in the
House Committee before any bills can be discussed, the national anthem bill was effectively blocked. physically occupying the committee chair in
LegCo while being protected by security guards and other pro-establishment legislators, on 8 May 2020. On 8 May 2020, Lee, after declaring the authority to preside over a committee meeting to end the months-long legislation deadlock, physically occupied the vacant committee chair, citing her previous occupancy of the chair in 2019. Pro-Beijing lawmakers and security staff kept pro-democracy lawmakers at bay for the committee meeting, with Lee urging lawmakers to take their seats, stating "I have not seized power, I am the incumbent chairperson of the house committee". Scuffles broke out, with at least one pro-democracy lawmaker reportedly injured. Most of the pro-democracy lawmakers eventually walked out. Lee and LegCo legal adviser Connie Fung stated Lee could preside due to the abnormal situation where a chair had not been elected for six months due to
filibustering by pro-democracy lawmakers. The director of
Hong Kong Watch stated "The current logjam in LegCo is a direct result of a broken system where the only strategy that the democrats have, despite representing the majority, is filibustering." Reports stated that Lee intends to criminalise disrespect of the Chinese national anthem, and also intends to re-attempt to introduce
article 23 national security laws. On 28 May 2020, the bill passed its second reading. Pan-democracy legislator
Ted Hui dropped a rotten plant in front of LegCo president
Andrew Leung in protest, for which he was later fined. On 4 June 2020, the bill passed its third reading, with 41 legislators in favour of it and 1 against. 41 out of 42 pro-establishment legislators voted in favour of it, except the chairperson Leung who abstained. 1 out of 23 pan-democracy legislators voted against it, with the others abstaining, in protest. Before the voting, pan-democracy legislators
Raymond Chan and
Eddie Chu splashed a jar of reeking liquid in front of the rostrum in protest, accusing
Andrew Leung of being a “rubber stamp” and that what he did will “reek for ten thousand years”. They were later fined for their action. On 30 July 2021, police made its first arrest under the law. The detainee was a 40-year-old man who had allegedly urged people to boo the Chinese national anthem as it was played at a live screening of an
Olympics award ceremony in a shopping mall in
Kwun Tong. ==See also==