It was formed in the background of the intra-party struggles in the
Democratic Party in 2000. The factional struggle began in the
1998 Democratic Party leadership election where the Young Turks who believed in more pro-grassroots and radical approaches launched a "coup d'etat", supporting trade unionist
Lau Chin-shek to run against incumbent Vice-Chairman
Anthony Cheung who was leader of the
Meeting Point faction who believed in pro-middle class and moderate methods. The intra-party struggle intensified when
Andrew To proposed to put the minimum wage legislation on the
2000 Legislative Council election platform but was defeated by the Mainstreamers faction. The Young Turks faction were discontent with the monopoly of the Central Committee by the party leaders and the party's position on grassroots issues, as well as lack of financial support from the party. Led by Convenor
Fung Chi-wood, SDF core members included Andrew To and Lau San-ching. The SDF took an active role in the campaign against
Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa seeking for second term, co-founding the Hong Kong Democratic Development Network and Coalition Against Secord Term which opposed the unfair
Chief Executive election. It protested the "small-circle"
Election Committee subsector by-elections and protested against the uncontested election which saw Tung Chee-hwa re-elected for the second term. In February 2002, the SDF and
The Frontier issued a joint platform, demanding amendment of the
Basic Law and introducing referendum, protecting
judicial independence, introducing
competition law,
collective bargaining and laws protecting the poor and women. On 17 April 2002, the SDF general meeting announced dissolution of the SDF, in which 25 members including convenor Fung Chi-wood, deputy Steve Chan Kwok-leung, Andrew To, Leung Wing-kuen, Tsui Pak-tai and Lam Sam-shing who had already joined the Frontier, with about 25 other associates, in total of 50 members would join The Frontier, in which 42 would become the party members. ==Notable members==