Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong

{{short description|Political group in Hong Kong}}

{{Infobox political party

| country = Hong Kong

| name = Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong

| native_name = {{noitalics|{{nobold|香港經濟民生聯盟}}}}

| native_name_lang = zh-hk

| logo = Logo of the Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong.svg

| logo_size = 230px

| abbreviation = BPA

| chairman = Lo Wai-kwok

| leader1_title = Vice-Chairmen

| leader1_name = Jeffrey Lam
Priscilla Leung
Kenneth Lau
Ng Wing-ka

| colorcode = #78caec

| foundation = {{start date and age|2012|10|7|df=yes}}

| membership =

| merger = Economic Synergy
Professional Forum

| headquarters = 3204A, 32/F, Tower 1,
Admiralty Centre,
18 Harcourt Road,
Hong Kong

| affiliation1_title = Regional affiliation

| affiliation1 = Pro-Beijing camp

| ideology = Conservatism (HK)
Economic liberalism
Chinese nationalism

| position = Centre-right to right-wing

| seats1_title = Executive Council

| seats1 = {{Composition bar|2|33|hex={{party color|Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong}}}}

| seats2_title = Legislative Council

| seats2 = {{Composition bar|9|90|hex={{party color|Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong}}}}

| seats3_title = District Councils

| seats3 = {{Composition bar|24|470|hex={{party color|Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong}}}}

| seats4_title = NPC (HK deputies)

| seats4 = {{Composition bar|2|36|hex={{party color|Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong}}}}

| seats5_title = {{nowrap|CPPCC (HK members)}}

| seats5 = {{Composition bar|6|124|hex={{party color|Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong}}}}

| colours = {{colour box|{{party color|Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong}}}}{{colour box|#78BB2F}} Blue and green

| slogan = "Business Drives Economy,
Professionalism
Improves Livelihood"

| website = {{URL|https://www.bpahk.org|bpahk.org}}

}}

{{Infobox Chinese

| order = jp

| showflag = stp

| t = 香港經濟民生聯盟

| s = 香港经济民生联盟

| p = Xiānggǎng jīngjì mínshēng liánméng

| j = Hoeng1 gong2 Ging1 zai3 Man4 sang1 Lyun4 mang4

| y = hēung góng gīng jai màhn sāng lyùhn màhng

}}

{{Politics of Hong Kong}}

{{Conservatism in Hong Kong}}

The Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong (BPA) is a pro-Beijing, pro-business political party in Hong Kong. Chaired by Lo Wai-kwok, the party is currently the second-largest party in the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, holding eight seats. It also has two representatives in the Executive Council and five seats in the District Councils.

The Alliance came into existence on 7 October 2012 after the 2012 Legislative Council election, as a rebranding of a loose pro-business parliamentary group including Economic Synergy and Professional Forum, as well as two other nonpartisan legislators who mostly came from trade-based functional constituencies consisting of Hong Kong's leading chambers of commerce or business sectors. Out of the seven founding legislators, the party's only directly elected representative was Priscilla Leung of Kowloon West.

The party immediately emerged as the second-largest party in the legislature, overtaking the Liberal Party who had an uneasy relationship with Beijing as the representative for the big business interests. It also slowly expanded its grassroots by absorbing Priscilla Leung's Kowloon West New Dynamic and won 10 seats in the 2015 District Council election. The Alliance retained its seven seats in the 2016 Legislative Council election which saw its party chairman Andrew Leung elected as the Legislative Council President.

History

=Founding=

The Alliance was officially launched on 7 October 2012 on the basis of a loose political alliance under the same name on 21 August 2011, where 12 members of the Legislative Council from three pro-business groups, the Liberal Party, the Professional Forum, and the Economic Synergy joined together as a counter force to the pro-labour factions in the Legislative Council as well as the government. They fought over the Competition Bill subsequent to the Minimum Wage Bill with the support of powerful business unions and representative of small and medium-sized enterprises.{{cite book|page=112|title=The Changing Policy-Making Process in Greater China: Mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong: Case Research from Mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong|first1=Bennis Wai Yip|last1=So|first2=Yuang-kuang|last2=Kao|publisher=Routledge|year=2014}}

After the 2012 LegCo elections, members from the two members of the Professional Forum and three of the Economic Synergy with two other independent legislators officially formed the Alliance on 7 October 2012. Members were mostly supporters of Henry Tang, the former chief secretary who lost to Leung Chun-ying in the race in 2012 for the Chief Executive.{{cite news|title=Business Professionals Alliance 'has no fear' of direct elections|last=But|first=Joshua|url=http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/article/1123247/business-professionals-alliance-has-no-fear-direct-elections|date=9 January 2013}} The group consists of seven legislators which makes it the second largest political group in the Legislative Council, six of the seven members are from the functional constituencies. Unlike the grouping of the former legislature, the Liberal Party did not join the Alliance.

=Development=

During the 2015 Hong Kong electoral reform, Jeffrey Lam Kin-fung of the BPA and Ip Kwok-him of the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) led a walk-out of pro-Beijing legislators right before the historic vote on 18 June as an impromptu attempt to delay the division so that his party member Lau Wong-fat, who was delayed, could cast his vote in favour of the Beijing-backed reforms.{{cite news|title=Why Did Pro-Beijing Lawmakers Walk Out of the Hong Kong Vote?|url=https://blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2015/06/18/why-did-pro-beijing-lawmakers-walk-out-of-the-hong-kong-vote/|newspaper=The Wall Street Journal|date=18 June 2015}} The government's reform proposal failed as eight legislators voted in favour and 28 voted against, barely meeting the quorum of 35.{{cite news|work=ejinsight|first=Hang-chi|last=Lam|url=http://www.ejinsight.com/20150618-and-so-we-stagger-into-an-even-more-uncertain-future/|date=18 June 2015|title=And so, we stagger into an even more uncertain future}} Since it had been expected the reform would be voted down by 41-28 (which would fall only six votes short of the two-thirds absolute majority stipulated by the Basic Law), the failure in pro-Beijing camp's sudden tactics resulted in a surprising landslide defeat that gave the rest of the world the impression there was no support for the blueprint.{{cite news|title=Bickering escalates in pro-Beijing camp over bungled Legco vote on Hong Kong political reform|date=20 June 2015|newspaper=South China Morning Post|url=http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/politics/article/1823998/recriminations-fly-among-pro-beijing-camp-over-bungled-legco|first1=Tony|last1=Cheung|last2=Lai|first2=Ying-kit|first3=Jeffie|last3=Lam}}

In the 2015 District Council election, the BPA won 10 seats in total. The alliance retained all seven seats in the 2016 Legislative Council election with the vice-chairman Jeffrey Lam narrowly defeated Liberal Party challenger Joseph Can Ho-lim in Commercial (First). After party chairman Andrew Leung was elected President of the Legislative Council, he resigned from as chairman post and was succeeded by Lo Wai-kwok. Leung was promoted as honorary chairman alongside Lau Wong-fat, while Lau's son, Kenneth Lau who took over his father seat in Heung Yee Kuk, was picked as the new vice-chairman.{{cite news|title=盧偉國接替梁君彥任經民聯主席 劉業強增選為副主席|work=HK01|url=http://www.hk01.com/%E6%B8%AF%E8%81%9E/48334/%E7%9B%A7%E5%81%89%E5%9C%8B%E6%8E%A5%E6%9B%BF%E6%A2%81%E5%90%9B%E5%BD%A5%E4%BB%BB%E7%B6%93%E6%B0%91%E8%81%AF%E4%B8%BB%E5%B8%AD-%E5%8A%89%E6%A5%AD%E5%BC%B7%E5%A2%9E%E9%81%B8%E7%82%BA%E5%89%AF%E4%B8%BB%E5%B8%AD|date=13 October 2016}}

In December 2018, legislator Ng Wing-ka of Industrial (Second) was invited to join the party, making the alliance the second largest party in the legislature with eight seats.{{cite news|title=政Whats噏:吳永嘉入工商界政黨 一餐飯決定|url=https://hk.on.cc/hk/bkn/cnt/news/20181220/bkn-20181220223102762-1220_00822_001.html|date=2018-12-22|work=on.cc}}

In February 2021, after Xia Baolong said that only "patriots" must govern Hong Kong, the BPA released a statement supporting Xia's position and that it looks forward to the changes.{{Cite web|title='Beijing must lead HK's electoral reforms' - RTHK|url=https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1576789-20210222.htm?|access-date=2021-02-22|website=news.rthk.hk|language=en-gb}} Additionally, the BPA claimed that Beijing is not trying to suppress antigovernmental voices.{{Cite web|title=Legco looking forward to 'whatever Beijing decides' - RTHK|url=https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1576822-20210222.htm?|access-date=2021-02-24|website=news.rthk.hk|language=en-gb}}

Leadership

=Chairmen=

=Vice-Chairmen=

=Secretaries-General=

=Honorary Chairmen=

=Council Chairmen=

=Council Vice-Chairmen=

  • David Lie, 2012–present

Performance in elections

=Legislative Council elections=

class="wikitable" style="text-align: right;"
align=center

! Election

! Number of
popular votes

! % of
popular votes

! GC
seats

! FC
seats

! EC
seats

! Total seats

! +/−

! Position

2016

| 49,745{{nochange}}

| 2.29{{nochange}}

| 1

| 6

|

| {{Composition bar|7|70|hex={{party color|BPAHK}}}}

| 0{{nochange}}

| 2nd{{nochange}}

2021

| –

| –

| 0

| 5

| 2

| {{Composition bar|7|90|hex={{party color|BPAHK}}}}

| 1{{decrease}}

| 3rd{{decrease}}

=District Council elections=

class="wikitable" style="text-align: right;"
align=center

! Election

! Number of
popular votes

! % of
popular votes

!{{Abbr|D.E.|Directly elected}}
seats

!{{Abbr|E.C.|Electoral college of "Three Committees"}}
seats

!{{Abbr|App.|Appointed}}
seats

!{{Abbr|Ex off.|Ex officio}}
seats

! Total seats

! +/−

2015

| 27,452{{nochange}}

| 1.90{{nochange}}

|11

| rowspan="2" |

| rowspan="2" |

|1

| {{Composition bar|12|458|hex={{party color|BPAHK}}}}

| {{nochange}}

2019

| 66,504{{increase}}

| 2.27{{increase}}

|3

|2

| {{Composition bar|5|479|hex={{party color|BPAHK}}}}

| 7{{decrease}}

2023

| 59,105{{decrease}}

| 5.04{{increase}}

|4

|8

|10

|2

| {{Composition bar|24|470|hex={{party color|BPAHK}}}}

| 18{{increase}}

Representatives

=Executive Council=

=Legislative Council=

=District Councils=

The BPA holds 24 seats in 11 District Councils (2024–2027):

class="wikitable" style="text-align:left;"
DistrictConstituencyMember
Eastern

|Appointed

|Kacee Ting Wong

rowspan="2" |Southern

| rowspan="2" |District Committees

|Adam Lai Ka-chi

Howard Chao
rowspan="4" |Yau Tsim Mong

|Yau Tsim Mong North

|Li Sze-man

District Committees

|Wong Kin-san

rowspan="2" |Appointed

|Chan Siu-tong

Rowena Wong Siu-ming
rowspan="3" |Sham Shui Po

|Sham Shui Po East

|Chan Kwok-wai

District Committee

|Jeffrey Pong Chiu-fai

Appointed

|Aaron Lam Ka-fai

rowspan="4" | Kowloon City

|Kowloon City South

| Lee Chiu-yiu

District Committee

| Leung Yuen-ting

rowspan="2" |Appointed

| Steven Cho Wui-hung

He Huahan
Tuen Mun

| Ex officio

| Kenneth Lau Ip-keung

Yuen Long

| rowspan="2" |Appointed

|Chong Kin-shing

North

|Zinnie Chow Tin-yi

rowspan="3" |Tai Po

|Tai Po South

|Lo Hiu-fung

District Committees

|Rex Li Wah-kwong

Appointed

|Chan Cho-leung

Sha Tin

| Ex officio

| Mok Kam-kwai

Kwai Tsing

|District Committees

|Ariel Mok Yee-ki

See also

References

{{reflist|30em}}