March 2018 Hong Kong by-elections

2018 Hong Kong by-elections

← 2016 11 March 2018 2021 →

3 Geographical Constituencies & 1 Functional Constituency
in the Legislative Council
Turnout43.13%
  Charles Mok
Leader Charles Mok Martin Liao
Alliance Pro-democracy Pro-Beijing
Seats won 2 2
Popular vote 426,003 388,017
Percentage 47.43% 43.20%

Camps with most votes by each district

Legislative Councillors before election

Nathan Law (D)
Yau Wai-ching (Y)
Sixtus Leung (Y)
Yiu Chung-yim (Ind)

Elected Legislative Councillors

Au Nok-hin (Ind)
Vincent Cheng (DAB)
Gary Fan (ND)
Tony Tse (Ind)

The 2018 Hong Kong Legislative Council by-election was held on 11 March 2018 for four of the six vacancies in the Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo) - the Hong Kong Island, Kowloon West and New Territories East geographical constituencies and the Architectural, Surveying, Planning and Landscape functional constituency - resulting from the disqualification of six pro-democrat and localist camp Legislative Council members over the 2016 oath-taking controversy.[1] The by-election for the two other seats was not held due to pending legal appeals by the two disqualified legislators.

The pro-democrats and pro-Beijing camp each won two seats in the election. Independent democrat Au Nok-hin replaced Demosistō's Agnes Chow - whose candidacy was rejected before the election - won in Hong Kong Island, and the Neo Democrats' Gary Fan retook his seat in New Territories East, while pro-Beijing nonpartisan Tony Tse, who was defeated in his 2016 re-election bid, regained the Architectural, Surveying, Planning and Landscape seat, and Vincent Cheng of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) caused an upset in Kowloon West by narrowly defeating independent democrat Yiu Chung-yim who lost his seat in the oath-taking controversy, making it the first time the pro-Beijing camp received a greater vote share than the pro-democrats in a geographical constituency since 2000 and the first time a pro-Beijing candidate won in a geographical constituency by-election since 1992.

The vote share of the pro-democracy camp dropped significantly from the traditional level of around 55 per cent to only 47 per cent, with a low turnout of 43 per cent. As a result, the pro-Beijing camp maintained its dominance in the geographical constituencies following the oath-taking disqualification with a one-seat majority.

  1. ^ "By-election to fill four seats vacated by disqualified Hong Kong lawmakers set for March 11". South China Morning Post. 14 September 2017.

Developed by StudentB