Hong Kong establishment crushed at polls in stark message to Beijing
In a rout that stunned the semi-autonomous territory, candidates seeking to loosen control by China seized an overwhelming majority of the 452 seats in the city's 18 district councils, bodies that have historically been firmly in the grip of a Beijing-aligned establishment.
The result was a humiliating rebuke to Beijing and Chief Executive Carrie Lam, who has dismissed calls for political reform and had repeatedly suggested that a silent majority supported her administration and opposed the protest movement.
"The government will
She gave no specifics on her next move, but opponents quickly called on her to
"The voters used the most peaceful way to tell the government that we won't accept Hong Kong becoming a police state, and an authoritarian regime," said Wu Chi-wai, the chairman of the Democratic Party, Hong Kong's largest anti-establishment party.
"The government must squarely face... public opinion."
The Labour Party, another leading component of the pro-democracy bloc, attributed the election result to "the sweat, blood and tears" of protesters.
Chatter on a popular web forum used previously to urge people to turn out for protests called for a march on Sunday to press the government to respond to the movement's demands.
'Revolution'
Millions took to the streets earlier this year after Lam's government introduced a bill to allow extraditions to China's opaque judicial system.
It
District councils handle mundane community-level issues like garbage collection and the polls typically generate
The outcome was "
"It's a sound repudiation of the (Hong Kong) administration and Beijing's policy toward Hong Kong."
He said the result could hasten Beijing's expected removal of Lam as
"Protesters will see this astounding victory as a mandate given by the people, so they will fight harder. But
Pro-democracy candidates grabbed 388 seats
Record turnout
Beijing did not immediately comment but Foreign Minister Wang Yi, on a trip to Japan, implicitly underlined China's ultimate sway over the city, saying "no matter what happens, Hong Kong is a part of China".
"Any attempt to mess up Hong Kong, or even damage its prosperity and stability, will
A record 71 percent of the 4.13 million registered voters had cast ballots, according to Hong Kong's election watchdog.
The city's largest pro-Beijing political party
Among them were firebrand lawmaker Junius Ho, one
"
The vote is the closest Hong Kong gets to direct representation.
Its legislature
District councils have little political sway, but some candidates for next year's legislative elections will
Protests eased in the poll run-up after pro-democracy figures urged calm in a campaign marred earlier by violence.
One pro-democracy candidate,
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