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WSWS : News
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: China
& Hong Kong
Former colonial official named Hong Kong chief executive
By John Chan
29 June 2005
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Donald Tsang, 61, was automatically selected as Hong Kongs
new chief executive on June 16 after Beijings hand-picked
electoral committee declared him to be the only valid candidate.
He was formally inaugurated on June 23 in Beijing, replacing the
former chief executive Tung-Chee Hwa, who resigned in March.
The election was always a foregone conclusion.
Tsang received at least 710 nominations for the post from the
794-member committee. Challengers included Lee Wing-tat, the chairman
of opposition Democratic Party, who obtained only 50 nominations.
The minimum required for a valid candidate is 100
nominations and so a formal committee vote, scheduled for July
10, was declared unnecessary.
While the mechanics of the election went according to plan,
the fact that Beijing was compelled to push Tung out and install
Tsang is the product of a political crisis. Tung, a wealthy shipping
magnate, was installed as chief executive following the British
handover of the former colony to China in 1997. As a loyal supporter
of Beijing, he blocked any democratic reforms and provoked widespread
hostility.
On Beijings orders, Tung attempted in 2003 to push through
an anti-subversion bill that would have outlawed the activities
of groups banned in China, such as Falun Gong. On July 1, the
anniversary of the British handover, up to half million people
protested against the proposed law, forcing Tung to eventually
put the legislation on hold. Demonstrations have continued over
the past two years calling for direct popular elections for the
post of chief executive and the legislative council.
Along with demands for democratic reform, the protests were
also spurred by social issuesdeteriorating living standards,
unemployment and the lack of social services. Another large demonstration
took place on July 1 last year, again overshadowing the official
celebrations of formal handover. Despised as a stooge of Beijing,
Tung and his administration were increasingly paralysed. He finally
resigned in March for health reasons but no one was
in any doubt that he had become a political liability for Beijing.
Tsangs selection was not accidental. He previously functioned
as chief secretary under Tung and demonstrated his willingness
to implement Beijings requirements. But while he was an
integral part of the Tung administration, Tsang was not in the
public limelight and has been able to distance himself to some
extent from Tung. Various polls have found that he enjoys overwhelming
support, especially among young people. Both of these qualitieshis
past loyalty and relative popularitymake him useful to the
Chinese bureaucracy.
As a former top colonial official under the British, Tsang
has been able to cast himself as having a certain independence.
He has also played up his record as a poor boy made good. Given
the current economic difficulties in Hong Kong, there is a certain
hankering for the pastthe handover of Hong Kong coincided
with the 1997-98 Asian economic crisis and a marked decline in
living standards for many people.
The illusions in Tsang are likely to be short-lived. He is
not known for his defence of democratic rights. As Chinese leaders
have pointed out, the people of Hong Kong had even less say under
British colonial rule. Moreover, Tsang cannot reverse the underlying
economic decline of Hong Kong. Over the past decade, it has steadily
lost its position as the gateway for foreign investment into China.
Beijings turn to Tsang reflects an effort to reach a
new accommodation with the Hong Kong ruling elite. Whereas Tung
represented a relatively small number of entrepreneurs with close
ties to the Chinese leadership, Tsang is well-connected to the
old colonial bureaucracy, about which Beijing has always been
suspicious. In the negotiations prior to 1997, the last British
governor Chris Patten argued for the retention of the previous
public servants. China had denounced Anson Chan, who remained
as chief secretary until 2001, as a running dog for
the British.
Tsangs support in Beijing, as well as from Hong Kong
business circles, also hinges on another key factorhis willingness
to ruthlessly implement the demands of the market. His career
in the Hong Kong public service has been substantially in economic
areasin trade and finance. He was promoted to treasury secretary
in 1993 and to the top economic position of financial secretary
in 1995. Significantly, he played a key role between 1985 and
1989 in the negotiations between Britain and China over the Hong
Kong handover.
Tsang earned the gratitude of the Hong Kong business elite
when in the midst of the Asian economic crisis he authorised the
spending of $US3.2 billion in 1998 to prop up the islands
stockmarket. Amid growing economic difficulties, Beijing and local
business leaders want to be sure of a chief executive who can
implement tough economic policies. Tung, on the other hand, has
the reputation of being a failed businessman who bankrupted his
fathers company and then did the same to Hong Kong as a
whole.
At the same time, Chinas suspicions about Tsang remain.
Beijing has insisted that the new chief executive will initially
only serve out the remaining two years of Tungs five-year
term of office. The decision has involved months of wrangling
over the strict interpretation of Hong Kongs mini-constitutionthe
Basic Law. In effect, Beijing is hiring Tsang on a two-year probationary
period.
Tsang is not as beholden as Tung to Beijing, which bailed his
failing shipping business out of financial difficulties. He is
closely associated with Hong Kong business that retains economic
links to Britainfor instance, the London-based Hong Kong
and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC). Tsangs links to
Britain are epitomised by his British knighthooda fact that
he tried to downplay after 1997.
In his election campaign, Tsang sought to balance
populist posturing with expressions of loyalty to Beijing. In
the press conference to declare his formal candidacy on June 2,
he declared that he would reach out beyond the electoral
body to all citizens of Hong Kong. At the same time, when
asked about the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989, Tsang indicated
that it was time to bury the issue.
I had shared Hong Kong peoples passion and impetus
when the June 4 incident happened. But after 16 years, Ive
seen our countrys impressive economic and social development.
My feelings have become calmer. We can see the country has changed
in the past 16 years. We see major economic and political reforms,
changing the lives of the 1.3 billion people and indirectly benefitting
the people of Hong Kong. I think that we should look at it in
this angle, he said.
Tsang indicated prior to his installation that he would revive
plans to introduce the anti-subversion bill suspended by Tung.
He also promised to continue to lower tax ratesa policy
that will mean further cutbacks to public sector jobs and services.
These comments were duly noted in Beijing. The state-controlled
Xinhua News agency commented on June 23 that Tsang was a
man who knows the rules. It approvingly cited a Hong Kong
reporter: He has never disobeyed any decisions made by his
superiors during his more than 30-year career as a civil servant...
He is also an iron hand when enforcing government
policies...
After Tsangs selection, the Hong Kong-based Min Pao
newspaper warned that he was already destroying his popularity
by embracing a pro-Beijing line. Hong Kongs public
had high hopes for Donald Tsang. Thats why in the past two
weeks, when everyone saw him show his arrogant and stubborn side,
they felt disappointed.
Such comments will not sway Tsang. Just as under the British,
this long-time bureaucrat will endeavour to carry out his duties
and balance the competing interests of different masters to the
best of his ability. He is completely indifferent to the democratic
aspirations and pressing social needs of ordinary working people.
See Also:
A sign of desperation: Beijing
ousts Hong Kong's chief executive
[24 March 2005]
Hong Kong elections
reveal a marked political radicalisation
[16 September 2004]
Huge protest rally
in Hong Kong demands democratic and social reform
[6 July 2004]
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