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Hong Kong elections: Carrie Lam promises 'open mind' after election rout
Hong Kong's leader Carrie Lam has
said the government will listen to the public with an open mind, after
pro-Beijing candidates were resoundingly defeated in local elections.
According to local media counts, 17
of the 18 councils are now controlled by pro-democracy councilors.
The election saw an unprecedented
voter turnout of more than 71%
The result is being seen as a stinging rebuke of Ms. Lam's leadership through many months of protest and
clashes.
In a statement released online on Monday, Ms
Lam said the government respected the results.
She said there were "various
analyses and interpretations" but that "quite a few are of the view
that the results reflect people's dissatisfaction with the current situation
and the deep-seated problems in society".
-democracy
voters celebrating in Hong Kong.
The government would "listen
humbly to citizens' opinions and reflect on them seriously", she said.
For
nearly six months of demonstrations and
unrest have continued unabated -
they were sparked by a now withdrawn extradition bill.
Police have at times used live
rounds, wounding several protesters. Activists in turn have attacked police and
in one case set alight a government supporter.
Sunday's vote - which unfolded
without incident - was the opportunity for people to express at the ballot box
their view of Ms Lam's handling of the crisis.
The government and Beijing had been
hoping the election would bring a show of support from the so-called
"silent majority", but that did not materialize.
Instead some high-profile pro-Beijing
candidates lost their seats.
What
does it mean for Hong Kong?
Hong Kong's district councilors have
little political power and mainly deal with local issues such as bus routes and
rubbish collection, so the district elections don't normally generate such
interest.
But the district councilors also get
to choose 117 of their number to sit on the 1,200-member committee that selects
Hong Kong's leader, the chief executive. The landslide results mean all of those
117 seats are now likely to go to pro-democracy candidates.
It was always unclear how much of the
general population still supported the protesters as violence escalated each
month and authorities had been hoping the election result might marginalize
the protesters as a small group of fringe extremists.
But in many districts, young
first-time candidates, many who had explicitly aligned themselves with the
protesters, unseated established politicians backing the government.
The hope from activists is that the overwhelming victory of anti-establishment parties will force the government to
take protesters' demands more seriously.



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