Civic Passion
熱血公民
ChairmanCheng Chung-tai
Founded29 February 2012 (2012-02-29)
Dissolved3 September 2021 (2021-09-03)
HeadquartersYuen Long, Hong Kong
NewspaperPassion Times
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing[1]
Colours  Yellow
Website
civicpassion.hk
Civic Passion
Traditional Chinese熱血公民
Simplified Chinese热血公民
Literal meaninghot-blooded (passionate) citizens
Civic Passion founder Wong Yeung-tat.

Civic Passion was a radical,[2] populist,[3] localist,[4] and nativist[2] political party in Hong Kong. Founded by Wong Yeung-tat as an activist group in 2012, it held strong localist views and opposed the involvement of the Chinese government in the governance of Hong Kong.[5] In the 2016 Legislative Council election, the Civic Passion formed an electoral alliance with Wong Yuk-man's Proletariat Political Institute and Chin Wan's Hong Kong Resurgence Order. Cheng Chung-tai became the only candidate of the alliance elected to the legislature and subsequently took over as the leader of the Civic Passion. After the election, Cheng reorganised the group into a political party and pulled out from the social activism. From December 2020 to August 2021, it was the only opposition party in the Legislative Council of Hong Kong.

History

Founding

Former logo of Civic Passion.

The group was founded on 29 February 2012 by Wong Yeung-tat.[6] Wong Yeung-tat was a candidate for the electoral alliance People Power (a radical democratic political party) during the 2012 Legislative Council election in Kowloon East constituency and Civic Passion served as the election campaign vehicle for Wong. After losing the election, Wong denied any relationship with People Power and Civic Passion became non-affiliated with any group.

As an internet activist group, it runs Passion Times (Chinese: 熱血時報), an organisation that publishes printed materials and broadcast internet radio programmes and which has over 300,000 Facebook followers. The group's app was banned in China's Apple App store during the 2014 Hong Kong protests.[7] During the protests, its website suffered distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, during which Passion Times claims its website was hit with up to 200,000,000 requests per second.[8]

Activism and Umbrella Movement

Civic Passion takes a radical view towards the Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China and against the large influx of mainland tourists and new immigrants to Hong Kong. Due to these anti-mainland sentiments, the group has been accused of xenophobia, nativism and advocacy of Hong Kong independence by the pro-Beijing camp and even by mainstream democrats.[9]

Civic Passion criticises the moderate pan-democracy camp for their stance on immigration policy and border control and their relationship with Beijing. In 2013 and 2014, the group organised an alternative 4 June rally in Tsim Sha Tsui against the annual vigil to commemorate the Tiananmen Square crackdown held by the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China of the pan-democracy camp as they accused it of being under the theme of Chinese nationalistic sentiment. The alternative event attracted 200 people in 2013 and 7,000 in 2014, compared with 180,000 and 150,000 respectively for the Victoria Park event.[10][11]

During the 2014 Hong Kong protests, Civic Passion was one of the constituent groups of the Umbrella Movement. One of its activists, nicknamed "Frenchman", allegedly instigated the forced entry into the Legislative Council Complex, in which masked raiders rammed glass doors and dispersed promptly after two panes of the glass door were broken. Wong Yeung-tat denied claims that he instigated or planned the incident.[12] The group also allegedly tried to gain control of the main stage of the Admiralty site and confronted the campaign leadership after the pan-democrats condemned the attack on the LegCo building.[13]

In early 2015, it organised anti-parallel trading protests with another localist group Hong Kong Indigenous against the growing influx of mainland Chinese shoppers engaging in parallel trading in early 2015, aggressively picketing the alleged shoppers and having clashes with the police.[14] After the third demonstration, the central government said it would restrict Shenzhen residents to one visit a week.[2]

In May 2016 Civic passion announced the creation of a summer camp program which would feature “military style training” and “lectures on localism”.[15] Wong Yeung-tat dismissed claims by critics that the program was designed to instil a radical localist ideology, and instead likened the program to the Hong Kong Army Cadets Association Limited led by Regina Leung, the wife of Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying.

2015–2016 elections

In the 2015 District Council election, Civic Passion fielded six candidates, of which five ran against the pro-democratic Democratic Party, but did not win any seat. However, Democrat heavyweight Albert Ho lost his seat in Lok Tsui to pro-Beijing lawyer Junius Ho with a margin of 125 votes while Civic Passion candidate Cheng Chung-tai took 391 votes.[16]

In the 2016 Legislative Council election, Civic Passion formed an electoral alliance with Proletariat Political Institute's Wong Yuk-man and Hong Kong Resurgence Order's Chin Wan. The electoral alliance set their platform Chin's "City-state theory", amending the current Basic Law of Hong Kong to maintain the Hong Kong's "city-state" status with the means of a de facto referendum triggered by all five legislators of the alliance resigning from each geographical constituencies. The alliance ultimately lost as only one of their candidates Cheng Chung-tai in New Territories West won a seat. The alliance bagged 154,176 votes, 7.11 per cent of the vote share. Wong Yeung-tat resigned from the leadership and was replaced by Cheng after the election.[17]

After the election, Wong Yeung-tat resigned as the leader of Civic Passion and subsequently quit the group with his Passion Times. Cheng took over as leader and transformed the group into a political party in which he became the chairman and Alvin Cheng as vice-chairman. Cheng vowed to switch the party from "militant" street action to parliamentary path with community groundwork and pulled out from social activism entirely.[18]

Parliament and disbandment

Cheng Chung-tai did not join the pro-democracy camp along with other anti-establishment colleagues after being elected to the Legislative Council. Cheng later became the only localist member in the parliament after the disqualification of members in the oath-taking controversy.

After protest erupted in mid-2019, the rift between Civic Passion and pro-democracy bloc still existed, as shown in House Committee brawl and National Anthem Bill debates. In November 2020, 4 pro-democracy Legislative Council members were disqualified by Hong Kong Government in accordance with the decision from Beijing. All pro-democracy legislators resigned to protest against the "unlawful" act, but Cheng and unaligned Pierre Chan announced their decision to stay, intensifying the disagreement between two sides.

Cheng Chung-tai was disqualified as Legislative Council member on 26 August 2021 after authorities deemed him as unpatriotic. Civic Passion, which he chaired, announced to disband on 3 September, citing no future political pathway ahead. Two district councillors from the party resigned on the same day.[19]

Leadership

Leader

Chairman

Vice-Chairman

Performance in elections

Legislative Council elections

Election Number of
popular votes
 % of
popular votes
GC
seats
FC
seats
Total seats +/− Position
2016 122,140Steady 5.63Steady 1 0
1 / 70
1Increase 10thIncrease

District Council elections

Election Number of
popular votes
 % of
popular votes
Total
elected seats
+/−
2015 3,006Steady 0.21Steady
0 / 431
0Steady
2019 14,326Increase 0.49Increase
2 / 452
2Increase

See also

References

  1. "Hong Kong's angry young millennials: an interview with Joshua Wong". Open Democracy. 1 November 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Sataline, Suzanne (18 May 2015). "Meet the Man Who Wants to Make Hong Kong a City-State". Foreign Policy.
  3. Buckley, Chris; Wong, Alan (26 October 2014). "Pro-Democracy Movement's Vote in Hong Kong Abruptly Called Off". New York Times.
  4. 李峻嶸 (22 February 2016). "李峻嶸:泛民和泛社運如何催生右翼本土". 端傳媒.
  5. Ending the party … with thought power?, SCMP, 12 June 2014
  6. Organisers say 510,000 people take to the streets for July 1 march, South China Morning Post, 1 July 2014
  7. Lee, Terrence (11 November 2014). "Anti-communist news site Passion Times banned from China's Apple App Store". Tech in Asia.
  8. passiontimes.hk brutally attacked by 200,000,000 requests per second, Passion Times, 16 November 2014
  9. "Commission on Strategic Development: Hong Kong's Relationship with the Central Authorities/the Mainland" (PDF). Central Policy Unit. Hong Kong Government. 26 May 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 December 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  10. Ip, Kelly; Phneah, Jeraldine; NectarGan (5 June 2013) "Undampened" Archived 14 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine. The Standard.
  11. Tiananmen massacre remembered at massive Hong Kong vigil, chinaworker.info, 6 June 2014
  12. Lau, Kenneth (20 November 2014). "Rioters linked to Mad Dog follower". The Standard. Archived from the original on 9 December 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  13. Tsang, Emily; Sung, Timmy; Chan, Samuel (21 November 2014). "Split within Occupy deepens as splinter group challenges leadership". South China Morning Post.
  14. Chan, Kevin (2 March 2015). "Chinese shoppers latest target of Hong Kong protest anger". USA Today.
  15. Ng, Kang-chung (4 May 2016). "Pro-independence Hong Kong radicals start recruiting youth corps for 'military' summer camp". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 6 December 2016.
  16. "Out with the old: Two big-name pan-democrats ousted in tight district council election races". South China Morning Post. 23 November 2015.
  17. "黃洋達辭任熱血領導 黃毓民:樹敵多累選情". AM730. 6 September 2016.
  18. "【專訪】鄭松泰:黃洋達退出熱血公民 熱血公民撤出社運 加強社區服務 下月政黨化". Stand News. 5 January 2017.
  19. Ho, Kelly (3 September 2021). "Hong Kong's Civic Passion disbands citing 'no way forward' after chairman ousted from legislature". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.