释义 |
- Electoral method
- Campaign
- Results Overview Vote summary Seat summary
- Result breakdown Geographical constituencies (20 seats) Functional Constituencies (30 seats) Election Committee (10 seats)
- Implication
- References
- External links
{{EngvarB|date=July 2014}}{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2014}}{{Infobox Election | election_name = 1998 Hong Kong legislative election | country = Hong Kong | type = parliamentary | ongoing = no | previous_election = 1996 Hong Kong provisional legislative election | previous_year = 1996 | previous_mps = List of LegCo members elected in Hong Kong legislative election, 1996 | next_election = Hong Kong legislative election, 2000 | next_year = 2000 | next_mps = List of LegCo members elected in Hong Kong legislative election, 2000 | seats_for_election = All 60 seats to the Legislative Council | majority_seats = 31 | elected_mps = elected members | election_date = 24 May 1998 | registered = 2,795,371 {{small|(GC)}} | turnout = 1,489,705 (53.29%) | image1 = | leader1 = Martin Lee | alliance1 = Pro-democracy camp | party1 = Democratic Party (Hong Kong) | leaders_seat1 = Hong Kong Island | last_election1 = 19 seats, 42.26% | seats1 = 13 | popular_vote1 = 634,635 | percentage1 = 42.87% | swing1 = {{increase}}0.61pp | image2 = | leader2 = Allen Lee | party2 = Liberal Party (Hong Kong) | alliance2 = Pro-Beijing camp | leaders_seat2 = New Territories East {{small|(defeated)}} | last_election2 = 10 seats, 1.64% | seats2 = 10 | popular_vote2 = 50,335 | percentage2 = 3.40% | swing2 = {{increase}}1.76pp | image3 = | leader3 = Tsang Yok-sing | party3 = Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong | alliance3 = Pro-Beijing camp | leaders_seat3 = Kowloon West | last_election3 = 6 seats, 15.66% | seats3 = 9 | popular_vote3 = 373,428 | percentage3 = 25.23% | swing3 = {{increase}}9.57pp | image4 = | leader4 = Ambrose Lau | party4 = Hong Kong Progressive Alliance | alliance4 = Pro-Beijing camp | leaders_seat4 = Election Committee | last_election4 = 1 seat, 2.85% | seats4 = 5 | popular_vote4 = N/A | percentage4 = N/A | swing4 = N/A | image5 = | leader5 = Emily Lau | party5 = The Frontier (Hong Kong) | alliance5 = Pro-democracy camp | leaders_seat5 = New Territories East | last_election5 = New party | seats5 = 3 | popular_vote5 = 148,507 | percentage5 = 10.03% | swing5 = N/A | image6 = | leader6 = Christine Loh | party6 = Citizens Party (Hong Kong) | alliance6 = Pro-democracy camp | leaders_seat6 = Hong Kong Island | last_election6 = New party | seats6 = 1 | popular_vote6 = 41,633 | percentage6 = 2.81% | swing6 = N/A | title = President | before_election = Rita Fan | before_party = Independent | after_election = Rita Fan | after_party = Independent | map_image = LegCoElection1998.svg | map_size = 400px | map_caption = Elected candidates by each constituency }}The 1998 Hong Kong Legislative Council election was held on 24 May 1998 for members of the 1st Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo) since the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) in 1997. Replacing the Provisional Legislative Council (PLC) strictly controlled by the Beijing government and boycotted by the pro-democracy camp, the elections returned 20 members from directly elected geographical constituencies, 10 seats from the Election Committee constituency and 30 members from functional constituencies, of which 10 were uncontested. Taking the advantage of the proportional representation system installed by Beijing, the pro-Beijing party, the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), the weaker side compared to the more developed pro-democratic party, the Democratic Party recorded a clearer increase in the number of seats in the election.[1] The Democratic Party returned to the Legislative Council as the largest party with 13 seats, while the Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood, a pro-democratic party joined the Beijing-controlled Provisional Legislative Council lost all its seats. Electoral methodThe electoral method for the first Hong Kong Special Administrative Region was crafted by the Provisional Legislative Council (PLC) installed by the Beijing government during the intense Sino-British confrontation over the democratic reform carried out by the last colonial governor Chris Patten.[2] According to the Hong Kong Basic Law promulgated by Beijing in April 1990, the first legislature would be composed of 60 members, with 20 members returned by geographical constituencies through direct elections, 10 members returned by an election committee and 30 members returned by functional constituencies. For the geographical constituencies, A proportional representation system was adopted by the SAR government in replacement of the first-past-the-post system introduced in 1995. Under the system Hong Kong was divided into five large districts instead of 20 small ones, with voters in each district choosing three to five persons from candidate lists. It was designed to reward the weaker pro-Beijing candidates and dilute the electoral strength of the majority democrats.[3] For the functional constituencies, the corporate voting was restored after it was abolished in 1995. It reduced the number of eligible voters by almost 90 percent, from over 1.1 million in 1995 to fewer than 140,000 in 1998. There were also vast disparities in the number of eligible voters among the functional constituencies, ranging from highs of approximately 50,000 in the Education constituency to a few hundred or less in the Agriculture and Fisheries Transport, Insurance, Urban Council and Regional Council constituencies. For the election committee, the 10 seats would be elected by the 800-member Election Committee, successor to the 400-member Selection Committee which elected the SAR's first Chief Executive in 1996. The committee was predominantly composed of conservative, pro-Beijing business, industrial and professional elites.{{sfn|Diamond|2001|p=1986}} CampaignThe proportional representation system induced the contesting parties to practice strategic voting, to encourage split voting among their supporters. In New Territories East, Martin Lee's Democratic Party reportedly advised its supporters to split their family members' votes between the Democratic Party and its ally The Frontier to help ensure of a third pro-democracy candidate. In Hong Kong Island, the Democratic Party picked a relatively unknown candidate in the third place of its party list, a move reportedly intended to help Christine Loh of the pro-democratic Citizens Party to finish ahead of the second candidate Ip Kwok-him of the rival pro-Beijing Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB).{{sfn|Diamond|2001|p=1985–6}} Results{{for|details by LegCo members|List of LegCo members elected in Hong Kong legislative election, 1998}}OverviewThe results saw the pro-democratic camp once again collectively gained over 60 percent of the popular vote, but their share of directly elected seats shrink form 85 percent (17/20) to 65 percent (14/20), due to the new electoral system. The leading pro-Beijing party, the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB) which had suffered from the underrepresentation under the single-member plurality system, picked up one seat in each geographical constituency for its 25 percent share of the popular vote.{{sfn|Diamond|2001|p=1985}} The Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood (ADPL), a pro-democratic party joined the Beijing-controlled Provisional Legislative Council lost all its seats, while two other pro-democratic parties, The Frontier and Citizens Party won 3 and 1 seat respectively. The pro-business Liberal Party won most seats in the functional constituencies by taking 9 seats in the trade-based sectors, but failed to win any seat in the geographical constituency direct election. Its chairman Allen Lee could not save his seat in New Territories East which he won in the 1995 election. Some 77,813 voters (65 percent of those eligible) cast votes in the 20 functional constituencies while ten others ran uncontested. Reflecting the built-in conservative bias in the majority of the functional constituencies, pro-government parties and their unaffiliated allies dominated the sectors. Due to the pro-Beijing composition of the Election Committee, the pro-Beijing candidates won all 10 seats in the sector. {{Hong Kong legislative election, 1998}}Vote summary{{bar box |title=Popular vote |titlebar=#ddd |width=600px |barwidth=500px |bars={{bar percent|Democratic|{{Democratic Party (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|42.87}}{{bar percent|DAB|{{Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong/meta/color}}|25.23}}{{bar percent|Frontier|{{The Frontier (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|10.03}}{{bar percent|ADPL|{{Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood/meta/color}}|3.99}}{{bar percent|Liberal|{{Liberal Party (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|3.40}}{{bar percent|Citizens|{{Citizens Party (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|2.81}}{{bar percent|123DA|{{123 Democratic Alliance/meta/color}}|0.21}}{{bar percent|Independents|#D3D3D3|11.45}} }}Seat summary{{bar box |title=Seats |titlebar=#ddd |width=600px |barwidth=500px |bars={{bar percent|Democratic|{{Democratic Party (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|21.67}}{{bar percent|Liberal|{{Liberal Party (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|16.67}}{{bar percent|DAB|{{Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong/meta/color}}|15.00}}{{bar percent|PA|{{Hong Kong Progressive Alliance/meta/color}}|8.33}}{{bar percent|Frontier|{{The Frontier (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|5.00}}{{bar percent|Citizens|{{Citizens Party (Hong Kong)/meta/color}}|1.67}}{{bar percent|Independents|#D3D3D3|31.67}} }}Result breakdownGeographical constituencies (20 seats) Voting System: Closed party-list proportional representation with the Largest remainder method and Hare Quota. generated with de:Wikipedia:Helferlein/VBA-Macro for EXCEL tableconversion V1.7<\\hiddentext>|->Hong Kong Island (4 seats) | List № | Party/ Allegiance | Votes Received | % | Elected | Not elected | 1{{Party name with colour|Citizens Party (Hong Kong)}} | 39,251 | 12.76 | Christine Loh Kung-wai | | 2{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 12,377 | 4.02 | | Chong Chan-yau | 3{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} | 90,182 | 29.32 | Gary Cheng Kai-nam | Ip Kwok-him, Suen Kai-cheong, Christopher Chung Shu-kun | 4{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} | 7,485 | 2.43 | | Ada Wong Ying-kay, Alice Tso Shing-yuk, Alice Lam Chui-lin | 5{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} | 143,843 | 46.76 | Martin Lee Chu-ming, Yeung Sum | Yuen Bun-keung, Chan Kwok-leung | 6{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 2,588 | 0.84 | | Louis Leong Wing-on | 7{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 10,950 | 3.56 | | Jennifer Chow Kit-bing | 8{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 935 | 0.30 | | Li Hung | Total | 307,611 | 100.00 | |
| Kowloon West (3 seats) | List № | Party/ Allegiance | Votes Received | % | Elected | Not elected | 1{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} | 113,079 | 55.05 | Lau Chin-shek, James To Kun-sun | Eric Wong Chong-ki | 2{{Party name with colour|Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood}} | 39,534 | 19.25 | | Frederick Fung Kin-kee, Liu Sing-lee, Tam Kwok-kiu | 3 | | Atlas Alliance | 2,302 | 1.12 | | Helen Chung Yee-fong | 4{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} | 5,854 | 2.85 | | Chiang Sai-cheong, Chan Noi-yue, Edward Li King-wah | 5{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} | 44,632 | 21.73 | Jasper Tsang Yok-sing | Ip Kwok-chung, Wen Choy-bon | Total | 205,401 | 100.00 | |
| Kowloon East (3 seats) | List № | Party/ Allegiance | Votes Received | % | Elected | Not elected | 1{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} | 145,986 | 55.80 | Szeto Wah, Li Wah-ming | Mak Hoi-wah | 2{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} | 109,296 | 41.78 | Chan Yuen-han | Kwok Bit-chun, Lam Man-fai | 3{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 6,339 | 2.42 | | Fok Pui-yee | Total | 261,621 | 100.00 | |
| New Territories West (5 seats) | List № | Party/ Allegiance | Votes Received | % | Elected | Not elected | 1{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} | 147,098 | 39.21 | Lee Wing-tat, Ho Chun-yan | Zachary Wong Wai-yin, Josephine Chan Shu-ying | 2{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 25,905 | 6.91 | | Lam Wai-keung, Tai Kuen, Chow Ping-tim, Carmen Chan Ka-mun, Tso Shiu-wai | 3{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 38,627 | 10.30 | Leung Yiu-chung | | 4{{Party name with colour|The Frontier (Hong Kong)|The Frontier}} | 46,696 | 12.45 | Lee Cheuk-yan | Ip Kwok-fun | 5{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 11,176 | 2.98 | | Ting Yin-wah | 6{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} | 3,138 | 0.84 | | Paul Chan Sing-kong, Liu Kwong-sang, Wong Kwok-keung | 7{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} | 72,587 | 19.35 | Tam Yiu-chung | Leung Che-cheung, Chau Chuen-heung, Chan Wan-sang, Hui Chiu-fai | 8{{Party name with colour|Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood}} | 19,500 | 5.20 | | Yim Tin-sang | 9{{Party name with colour no link|Pioneer}} | 968 | 0.26 | | Lam Chi-leung | 10{{Party name with colour|123 Democratic Alliance}} | 3,050 | 0.81 | | Yum Sin-ling, Christopher Chu Cho-yan, Mak Ip-sing, Shung King-fai | 11{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 6428 | 1.71 | | Yeung Fuk-kwong | Total | 375,173 | 100.00 | |
| New Territories East (5 seats) | List № | Party/ Allegiance | Votes Received | % | Elected | Not elected | 1{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} | 33,858 | 10.25 | | Allen Lee Peng-fei, Wong Yiu-chee, Cheng Chee-kwok | 2{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 44,386 | 13.43 | Andrew Wong Wang-fat | | 3{{Party name with colour|Citizens Party (Hong Kong)}} | 2,382 | 0.72 | | Lui Yat-ming | 4{{Party name with colour|The Frontier (Hong Kong)|The Frontier}} | 101,811 | 30.81 | Emily Lau Wai-hing, Cyd Ho Sau-lan | | 5{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} | 56,731 | 17.17 | Lau Kong-wah | Cheung Hon-chung, Chan Ping, Wan Yuet-kau, Wong Mo-tai | 6{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} | 84,629 | 25.61 | Andrew Cheng Kar-foo | Wong Sing-chi, Lam Wing-yin, Shirley Ho Suk-ping | 7{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} | 6,637 | 2.01 | | Brian Kan Ping-chee | Total | 330,434 | 100.00 | |
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| Functional Constituencies (30 seats)Voting systems: Different voting systems apply to different functional constituencies, namely for the Heung Yee Kuk, Agriculture and Fisheries, Insurance and Transport, the preferential elimination system of voting; and for the remaining 24 FCs used the first-past-the-post voting system.[4] Constituency | Candidate(s) | Affiliation | Votes | % | Urban Council | Ambrose Cheung Wing-sum{{Party name with colour|Independent (politician)}} || 26 || 56.52 | Ronnie Wong Man-chiu{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 20 || 43.48 | Mok Ying-fan{{Party name with colour|Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood}}|| 0 || 0.00 | Regional Council | Tang Siu-tong{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} (PA) || 25 || 51.02 | Chiang Lai-wan{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 24 || 48.98 | Ngan Kam-chuen{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} || 0 || 0.00 | Heung Yee Kuk | Lau Wong-fat{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} (Liberal) || colspan=2| Uncontested | Agriculture and Fisheries | Wong Yung-kan{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} (DAB) || 81 || 65.32 | Lawrence Lee Hay-yue{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 43 || 34.68 | Insurance | Bernard Charnwut Chan{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 94 || 53.11 | Chan Yim-kwong{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || 83 || 46.89 | Alex Wong Po-hang{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 0 || 0.00 | Steven Lau Hon-keung{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 0 || 0.00 | Transport | Miriam Lau Kin-yee{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || 82 || 69.49 | Yuen Mo{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 36 || 30.51 | Education | Cheung Man-kwong{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} || 34,864 || 70.89 | Li Sze-yuen{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 5,319 || 29.11 | Legal | Margaret Ng Ngoi-yee{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 1,741 || 81.55 | Sylvia Siu Wing-yee{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 394 || 18.45 | Accountancy | Eric Li Ka-cheung{{Party name with colour|Independent (politician)}} || 3,556 || 65.04 | Edward Chow Kwong-fai{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 1,302 || 23.82 | Peter Chan Po-fun{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 609 || 11.14 | Medical | Edward Leong Che-hung{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 2,759 || 70.19 | Chan Ki-tak{{Party name with colour|Independent (politician)}} || 1,172 || 29.81 | Health Services | Michael Ho Mun-ka{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} || 11,420 || 82.21 | Peter Chua Sek-chon{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 2,472 || 17.79 | Engineering | Raymond Ho Chung-tai{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 2,036 || 55.95 | Wong King-keung{{Party name with colour|Independent (politician)}} || 1,112 || 30.56 | Luk Wang-kwong{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 491 || 13.49 | Architectural, Surveying and Planning | Edward Ho Sing-tin{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Labour (3 seats) | Chan Wing-chan{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} || 212 || 27.32 | Lee Kai-ming{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 212 || 27.32 | Chan Kwok-keung{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 204 || 26.29 | Chan Yun-che{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 99 || 12.76 | Ng Yat-wah{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 49 || 6.31 | Social Welfare | Law Chi-kwong{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Real Estate and Construction | Ronald Joseph Arculli{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || 206 || 69.13 | Jimmy Tse Lai-leung{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 92 || 30.87 | Tourism | Howard Young{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Commercial (First) | James Tien Pei-chun{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Commercial (Second) | Wong Yu-hong{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Industrial (First) | Kenneth Ting{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Industrial (Second) | Lui Ming-wah{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 186 || 63.48 | Ngai Shiu-kit{{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || 107 || 36.52 | Finance | David Li Kwok-po{{Party name with colour|Independent (politician)}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Financial Services | Chim Pui-chung{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 125 || 40.85 | Fung Chi-kin{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 117 || 38.24 | Wu King-cheong{{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || 47 || 15.36 | Syed Bagh Ali Sah Bokhary{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 17 || 5.56 | Sports, Performing Arts, Culture and Publication | Timothy Fok Tsun-ting{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 561 || 68.50 | Wu Chi-wai{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} || 258 || 31.50 | Import and Export | Hui Cheung-ching{{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Textiles and Garment | Sophie Leung Lau Yau-fun{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || colspan=2| Uncontested | Whole and Retail | Selina Chow Liang Shuk-yee{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || 945 || 66.41 | Wong Siu-yee{{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || 276 || 19.40 | Chan Choi-hi{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 202 || 14.20 | Information Technology | Sin Chung-kai{{Party name with colour|Democratic Party (Hong Kong)}} || 1,543 || 63.71 | Yung Kai-ning{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 456 || 18.83 | Ringo Chan Kei-fu{{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || 423 || 17.46 | |
Election Committee (10 seats)Party | Candidate | Votes |
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{{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} || Yeung Yiu-chung || 441 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Lee Kwong-lam || 83 {{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} || Thomas Pang Cheung-wai || 226 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Ng Leung-sing || 539 {{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (Hong Kong)}} || Ho Sai-chu || 386 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Ma Fung-kwok || 466 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Kan Fook-yee || 300 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || James Chiu || 141 {{Party name with colour|Independent (politician)}} || Peggy Lam Pei || 346 {{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || Charles Yeung Chun-kam || 380 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Rita Fan Hsu Lai-tai || 628 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Ng Ching-fai || 530 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Maria Joyce Chang Sau-han || 149 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Ho Ka-cheong || 97 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Lee Kwong-lam || 83 {{Party name with colour|Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood}} || Law Cheung-kwok || 259 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Cheung Hok-ming|| 273 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Siu See-kong || 56 {{Party name with colour|Heung Yee Kuk}} || Pang Hang-yin || 212 {{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || David Chu Yu-lin || 469 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Stephen Yam Chi-ming|| 137 {{Party name with colour|Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong}} || Chan Kam-lam || 432 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Joseph Hui Tak-fai || 214 {{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || Choy So-yuk || 397 {{Party name with colour|Nonpartisan}} || Leung Tsz-leung || 85 {{Party name with colour|Hong Kong Progressive Alliance}} || Lau Hon-chuen || 504
ImplicationThe 1998 election is the first election after the Handover in 1997. Some observers believed the generally free and fair election was crucial for the consolidation of the newly established HKSAR and the political setting of "One Country, Two Systems" after widespread criticism on the PLC.[5] References1. ^{{cite book|page=79|title=Patron-Client Politics and Elections in Hong Kong|first=Bruce Kam-kwan|last=Kwong|publisher=Routledge|year=2009}} 2. ^{{cite book|title=Power Transfer and Electoral Politics: The First Legislative Election in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region|first=Hsin-chi|last=Kuan|publisher=Chinese University Press|year=1999|page=3}} 3. ^{{cite book|title=Elections and Democracy in Greater China|first1=Larry|last1=Diamond|first2=Ramon H.|last2=Myers|publisher=OUP Oxford|ref=harv|year=2001|page=1985–6}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.elections.gov.hk/elections/legco1998/english/facts/facts.html |title=1998 LegCo Election- Facts about the Election |publisher=Elections.gov.hk}} 5. ^{{cite journal | last=Wong | first=Timothy Ka-ying | date= 1998 | title=The First Legislative Council Election of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: Meaning and Impact | journal=Issues & Studies |volume= 34 | issue= 9 | pages=133 | url= | accessdate= }}
External links- [https://web.archive.org/web/20160303231311/http://www.elections.gov.hk/elections/legco1998/524-e.htm#gc524-e Official Government election site]
{{Hong Kong legislative election, 1998 navbox}}{{Hong Kong elections}}{{HKafter1997}} 4 : 1998 elections in China|1998 in Hong Kong|Elections in Hong Kong|May 1998 events |