Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2003 Hong Kong local elections

none


none

FieldValue
election_name2003 Hong Kong local elections
countryHong Kong
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1999 Hong Kong local elections
previous_year1999
next_election2007 Hong Kong local elections
next_year2007
seats_for_electionAll Elected Constituencies
400 (of the 529) seats in all 18 Districts Councils
election_date23 November 2003
registered2,973,612 4.98%
turnout1,066,373 (44.10%) 8.28pp
image2[[File:Tsang Yok-sing.jpg150x150px]]
leader2Tsang Yok-sing
party2Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong
alliance2Pro-Beijing camp
last_election281 seats, 23.53%
seats262
seat_change221
popular_vote2**241,202**
percentage2**22.94%**
swing20.59pp
image1[[File:Yeung Sum in 2015.jpg150x150px]]
leader1Yeung Sum
party1Democratic Party (Hong Kong)
alliance1Pro-democracy camp
last_election186 seats, 24.85%
seats1**95**
seat_change117
popular_vote1223,675
percentage121.27%
swing13.57pp
image3[[File:Frederick Fung at Alliance for True Democracy.jpg150x150px]]
leader3Frederick Fung
party3Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood
alliance3Pro-democracy camp
last_election319 seats, 4.70%
seats325
seat_change34
popular_vote353,264
percentage35.07%
swing30.36pp
image4[[File:Lau Kong-wah 2014.jpg150x150px]]
leader4Lau Kong-wah
party4Civil Force
alliance4Pro-Beijing camp
last_election411 seats, 2.42%
seats417
seat_change43
popular_vote425,720
percentage42.45%
swing40.02pp
image5[[Image:James Tien cut.jpg150x150px]]
leader5James Tien
party5Liberal Party (Hong Kong)
alliance5Pro-Beijing camp
last_election515 seats, 3.42%
seats514
seat_change51
popular_vote529,108
percentage52.77%
swing50.65pp
leader6Ambrose Lau
party6Hong Kong Progressive Alliance
alliance6Pro-Beijing camp
last_election616 seats, 2.65%
seats613
seat_change65
popular_vote629,091
percentage62.77%
swing60.12pp
image7[[File:Emily Lau cropped.jpg150x150px]]
leader7Emily Lau
party7The Frontier (Hong Kong)
alliance7Pro-democracy camp
last_election74 seats, 1.16%
seats76
seat_change71
popular_vote725,349
percentage72.41%
swing71.25pp
image8[[File:Leung Yiu-chung 2017.jpg150x150px]]
leader8Leung Yiu-chung
party8Neighbourhood and Worker's Service Centre
alliance8Pro-democracy camp
last_election82 seats, 0.41%
seats84
seat_change81
popular_vote814,146
percentage81.35%
swing80.94pp
image9[[File:2015年七一藍營 (cropped).JPG150x150px]]
leader9Johnny Mak
party9Yuen Long Tin Shui Wai Democratic Alliance
alliance9Pro-democracy camp
last_election9*New party*
seats94
seat_change92
popular_vote98,418
percentage90.80%
swing9N/A
map_image2003DCelectionmap.svg
map_size400px
map_captionMap of the winning party by constituency

400 (of the 529) seats in all 18 Districts Councils The 2003 Hong Kong District Council elections were held on 23 November 2003 for all 18 districts of Hong Kong, 400 members from directly elected constituencies out of total 529 council members. It was the second District Council election after the handover of Hong Kong in 1997.

The election was historically significant as it was the first election came after the controversies over the legislation of the Hong Kong Basic Law Article 23 and the large-scale July 1 protests in mid-2003 against the unpopular Tung Chee-hwa administration. The election saw the devastating defeat of the pro-government pro-Beijing camp.

The pro-Beijing flagship party Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB) received the largest defeat in the elections, only 62 of the 206 of its candidates were elected. The party's heavyweights, Yeung Yiu-chung, Lau Kong-wah and Ip Kwok-him all lost their seats to the pro-democracy challengers, with Ip lost his longtime base of Kwun Lung to Cyd Ho of The Frontier. Choy So-yuk also faced challenge from Leung Kwok-hung of April Fifth Action, only retained her seat with narrow margin. DAB chairman Tsang Yok-sing resigned for the party's defeat after the election, and subsequently was replaced by Ma Lik. The pro-democracy camp received overall success, with Democratic Party winning the most of 95 seats.

After the election, Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa appointed 102 pro-government members to the District Councils to dilute the influence of the pro-democrats and retained control of some of the councils.

Overview

Before the elections were held, media had speculated the effect of the controversy over the legislation of the Hong Kong Basic Law Article 23 to the pro-Beijing camp. With the surge of popularity after the 2003 July 1 protests, the pro-democrats managed to present a united platform in the District Council election. More than two hundred candidates form all pro-democracy parties and groups supported the direct election of the Chief Executive by 2007; direct elections of all seats of the Legislative Council by 2008; the initiation of public consultations on political reforms by the government before the end of 2003; and the abolition of all appointed seats to the District Councils after the November 2003 elections.

The pro-democrat candidates challenged the heavyweights of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), the flagship pro-government party in many constituencies, including the party vice-chairman Ip Kwok-him's Kwun Lung, Choy So-yuk's Kam Ping, Yeung Yiu-chung's Mei Foo South and Lau Kong-wah's Kam To. Lau Kong-wah stood in Kam To, challenging Democratic Party's Shirley Ho Suk-ping. As Lau was the Legislative Councillor for New Territories East, pro-democrats saw Kam To as a crucial target. Icons like Audrey Eu, Alan Leong and Cheung Man-kwong took turns campaigning for Shirley Ho. Standing in the traditional Hokkien community Kam Ping, Choy so-yuk faced the challenged from Leung Kwok-hung of the April Fifth Action, while The Frontier's Cyd Ho stood in Kwun Lung against Ip Kwok-him. Both Ho and Ip were members of the Legislative Council, while Ip chaired the Legco committee on the national security bill. Ho was supported by Article 45 Concern Group's Ronny Tong and Ip was supported by the DAB chairman Tsang Yok-sing.

An unprecedented record of 44 percent, in total of 1.06 millions voters cast their vote in the election. In result, Yeung Yiu-chung, Lau Kong-wah and Ip Kwok-him were all defeated by the pro-democrats while Choy So-yuk retained her seat with narrow margin. The pro-democracy flagship party Democratic Party became the clear winner by winning the most number of 95 seats. Cyd Ho's Civic Act-up which was established after the July 1 protest also captured three seats in the Wan Chai District Council and was able to control the council for the first time with the other independent councillors. Only 62 of the 206 DAB candidates were elected, which became the worst defeat in DAB's history. Tsang Yok-sing took responsibility for the electoral setback and resigned his chairman post. He claimed that the defeat was due to the DAB's unfortunate "Tung loyalist" public image.

Results

General outcome

|- ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" colspan=3 |Political Affiliation ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Popular vote ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%± ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Standing ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Elected ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |± |- | 241,202 || 22.94 || 0.59 || 200 || 62 || 21 |- | 25,720 || 2.45 || 0.02 || 22 || 17 || 3 |- | 29,108 || 2.77 || 0.65 || 27 || 14 || 1 |- | 29,091 || 2.77 || 0.05 || 23 || 13 || 5 |- | 1,189 || 0.11 || - || 1 || 1 || - |- | 2,766 || 0.26 || 0.13 ||| 3 || 0 || - |- | 1,314 ||0.12 || - || 2 || 0 || - |- | 833 || 0.08 || - || 1 || 0 || - |- | - || - || - || 1 || 1 || - |- | 156,827 || 14.92 || - || 136 || 92 || 6 |-

- style="background-color:Pink"
223,675
-
53,264
-
25,349
-
14,146
-
8,418
-
5,170
-
5,748
-
4,032
-
1,489
-
2,888
-
1,149
-
361
-
130,453
- style="background-color:LightGreen"
-
- style="background-color:#DDDDDD;"
83,939
-
}

Results by district

CouncilPrevious
controlPrevious
partyPost-election
controlLargest
partyDemocratic Party (Hong Kong)}}; width:35px;"DPDemocratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}}; width:35px;"DABAssociation for Democracy and People's Livelihood}}; width:35px;"ADPLCivil Force}}; width:35px;"CFLiberal Party (Hong Kong)}}; width:35px;"LibHong Kong Progressive Alliance}}; width:35px;"PAThe Frontier (Hong Kong)}}; width:35px;"TF/CAOthersPro-demPro-BeijingAppointed
& ex officioCompositionDetailsCentral & WesternWan ChaiEasternSouthernYau Tsim MongSham Shui PoKowloon CityWong Tai SinKwun TongTsuen WanTuen MunYuen LongNorthTai PoSai KungSha TinKwai TsingIslandsTOTAL
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**6**1224**9**64{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 19party1 = 9partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 6partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 4partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-central-and-western-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingNOCCivic Act-up}}CAU21**3**5**7**43{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 14party1 = 7partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 4partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 3partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-wan-chai-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing6**12**111712**24**9{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 46party1 = 12partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 1partycolor2 = Grayparty3 = 24partycolor3 = Redparty4 = 9partycolor4 = FireBrick[Details](2003-eastern-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**2**1**2**122**15**4{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 21party1 = 2partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 15partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 4partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-southern-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**4**237**9**74{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 20party1 = 9partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 7partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 4partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-yau-tsim-mong-district-council-election)
Pro-democracyPro-democracy21**13**5**17**45{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 26party1 = 17partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 4partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 5partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-sham-shui-po-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingHong Kong Progressive Alliance}}PAPro-Beijing**7**23316**12**105{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 27party1 = 12partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 10partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 5partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-kowloon-city-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing4**5**21211**13**126{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 31party1 = 13partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 12partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 6partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-wong-tai-sin-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**9**4120**20**148{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 42party1 = 20partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 14partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 8partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-kwun-tong-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**5**1119**11**65+2{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 24party1 = 11partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 6partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 7partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-tsuen-wan-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**9****9**41614**15**7+1{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 37party1 = 14partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 15partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 8partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-tuen-mun-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing2**4**11217**22**7+6{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 42party1 = 7partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 22partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 13partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-yuen-long-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**8**53**10**65+4{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 25party1 = 10partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 6partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 9partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-north-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**7**32169**10**5+2{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 26party1 = 9partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 10partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 7partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-tai-po-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**4****4**3**4**58**12**5+2{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 27party1 = 8partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 12partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 7partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-sai-kung-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing72**14**112914**22**9+1{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 45party1 = 14partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 21partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 10partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-sha-tin-district-council-election)
Pro-democracyPro-democracy**11**11114**23**57+1{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 36party1 = 23partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 5partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 8partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-kwai-tsing-district-council-election)
Pro-BeijingPro-Beijing**4**41**7**4+8{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 20party1 = 1partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 7partycolor2 = Redparty3 = 12partycolor3 = FireBrick[Details](2003-islands-district-council-election)
**95****62****25****17****14****13****10****164****196****202****129**{{Composition_bar/advanceddivisionname =boxwidth = 70total = 529party1 = 198partycolor1 = Greenparty2 = 1partycolor2 = Greyparty3 = 201partycolor3 = Redparty4 = 129partycolor4 = FireBrick

Vote summary

Seat summary

Aftermath

In December 2003 after the elections, Tung appointed 21 political party appointees to the District Councils to dilute the influence of the pro-democrats as follows:

  • 8 members of the Liberal Party
  • 6 members of the DAB
  • 6 members from the Progressive Alliance
  • 1 from the New Century Forum

Professor of politics and sociology at Lingnan University, Dr. Li Pang-kwong said "As in the past, most of the appointees were pro-government or persons without a clear political stance... ensur[ing] that no district council is in the hands of the democrats."

A spokesman for the democrats said the appointees "will have an unfair advantage in that they are getting financial support from the government which will help them run for office in future elections."

References

References

  1. Cheng, Joseph Y. S.. (2007). "The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region in Its First Decade". City University of HK Press.
  2. (24 November 2014). "【蘋話當年】2003年民建聯區選大敗 曾鈺成辭任主席". Apple Daily.
  3. Frank Ching, "Tsang grooms his kind of political talent", Pg A12, ''[[South China Morning Post]]'', 24 June 2008
  4. link. (2011-05-22 , ''The Standard'', 29 December 2003)
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2003 Hong Kong local elections — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report