China pins hopes on Olympic star Vivian Kong for ‘high quality’ Hong Kong democracy
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Hong Kong Olympic gold medallist Vivian Kong said she wanted to "serve Hong Kong more... and win glory for Hong Kong".
PHOTO: REUTERS
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.HONG KONG – An Olympic gold medallist and other young faces are entering upcoming elections in Hong Kong as China strives to shore up the legitimacy of the city’s legislature, even though it vets all prospective candidates.
Beijing loyalists control the Legislative Council (Legco) but state media outlets have indicated that China wants more political talent and competition among its allies, with around one-third of the current legislature set to step down, including veteran lawmakers from major pro-Beijing parties.
Ms Vivian Kong, 31, a fencer who won gold at the 2024 Paris Olympics, and Mr Howard Chao, 38, the son of real estate tycoon Cecil Chao and a member of China’s top political advisory body, are among two openly pro-Beijing residents of Hong Kong who have submitted nominations for the Dec 7 poll.
Nominations close on Nov 6. They will be vetted by the Candidate Eligibility Review Committee, a group of senior Hong Kong officials working with national security police to conduct background checks on candidates for “patriotism”.
It has discretionary power to disqualify anyone.
“An important purpose of the central government’s improvement of Hong Kong’s electoral system is to reverse the past trend of political infighting and build a high quality democratic system,” China’s state-owned Ta Kung Pao newspaper reported in an editorial this week.
It added that such a system would support the government to enhance economic development.
China’s Liaison Office in Hong Kong did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
After mass pro-democracy protests in 2019
The electoral overhaul
Mr Tik Chi-yuen, who claims to be the only mildly democratic voice left in the legislature, has said he will not run again.
The entry by Ms Kong, who is openly pro-Beijing, into the race is an example of non-party elites entering politics at a time when the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities have sought to frame the city as democratic and open amid international criticism of the national security crackdown.
“Let me try to serve Hong Kong more... and win glory for Hong Kong,” said Ms Kong earlier this week.
The epee fencer staged a dramatic comeback in the 2024 Olympics final against a French rival to become the city’s third gold medallist.
She will not contest one of the 20 directly elected seats in the 90-member legislature, but one of 30 seats reserved for those who represent professional sectors.
A 1,500-strong committee stacked with Beijing loyalists will directly select 40 legislators.
For the tourism sector that Ms Kong is contesting – despite having no prior experience in that field – there are only around 176 votes and two candidates so far.
This compares with directly elected seats where competition is fiercer with hundreds of thousands of eligible voters.
Second poll after electoral overhaul
This will be the second legislative poll after the overhaul of the electoral system.
Beijing, which took control of Hong Kong after the 1997 handover by Britain, had initially promised to allow universal suffrage as an ultimate goal, and to grant the city a high degree of autonomy over its affairs.
Opposition democrats, led by the Democratic Party, performed strongly in elections between 1997 and 2016, controlling over a third of the legislature at its peak, helping shape Hong Kong’s post-handover democratic development and civil society.
Earlier in 2025, however, the Democratic Party announced it would disband
The Public Opinion Research Institute (Pori) found in a recent survey that over half of respondents were dissatisfied with the performance of incumbent lawmakers, and 60 per cent of respondents did not know who was running in their constituency.
The only time the legislature vetoed a Bill in the past four years
Some analysts say Ms Kong’s star allure and fighting spirit will help spotlight an institution criticised as a pro-Beijing echo chamber with little authentic debate, that drew a record low turnout of 30.2 per cent in 2021.
Senior Hong Kong officials have sought to drum up voter participation after the poor previous showing, while major chambers of commerce, several Chinese state-owned enterprises and some Hong Kong companies have urged people to vote.
Telecommunications operator PCCW said it would provide half a day of paid leave for staff to cast ballots, local media reported.
“Beijing wants to rejuvenate the profile of candidates through Ms Vivian Kong’s participation, such that more young people will be aware of the election,” said Dr Sonny Lo, a political scientist who has authored several books on Hong Kong politics.
But others remain unconvinced.
“People like Ms Vivian will be very politically dependent on those who nominate and support her to their positions,” said Mr Derek, 28, a resident who declined to give his surname given the sensitivity of the issue.
“This would further undermine the possibilities of autonomous decisions in the Legco,” he added. REUTERS

