1965 Hong Kong municipal election
The 1965 Urban Council election was held on 3 March 1965 for the 6 of the 10 elected seats of the Urban Council of Hong Kong after the membership of the elected members increased from 8 to 10.
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6 (of the 10) elected seats to the Urban Council | |||||||||||||||||||
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Registered | 29,529 14.29% | ||||||||||||||||||
Turnout | 6,492 (21.99%) 1.40pp | ||||||||||||||||||
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Overview
As for the previous election, there were four polling stations: City Hall in Central, North Point Government Primary School, Aberdeen Government Primary School, East wing of the Star Ferry Pier in South Kowloon and Queen Elizabeth School. Turnout was 6,492 of 29,529 eligible voters, approximately 22 percent. The Civic-Reform Coalition had collapsed in 1964, but the dominance of the two groups continued separately. Henry Hu representing Reform Club was elected to the Council for the first time.
On election day afternoon, six members of the Labour Party protested peacefully for two hours at Edinburgh Place outside the City Hall poll station with slogans of "abolish Urban Council", "support Labour don't vote", and "give Hong Kong democracy". They criticised the Urban Council as powerless to manage matters that had real impact on Hong Kong residents, and that of Hong Kong's population of nearly four million, fewer than 30,000 people had the right to vote.[1]
Elected members
Names of Candidate | Political Affiliation | Votes | |
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Brook Bernacchi | Reform Club | 4,192 | |
Alison Bell | Reform Club | 3,913 | |
Henry Hu | Reform Club | 3,828 | |
Li Yiu-bor | Civic Association | 3,768 | |
Woo Pak-foo | Civic Association | 3,616 | |
Hilton Cheong-Leen | Civic Association | 3,520 |
Unelected candidates
- Charles Ching (Reform Club)
- Dr. Pun Chung-chik (Civic Association)
- Henry Wong (Civic Association)
- Patrick Wong (Reform Club)
- Charles Yeung (Reform Club)
Citations
- 投票站外首次出現示威行動. 香港工商日報 (in Chinese). 4 March 1965. p. 5.
References
- Lau, Y.W. (2002). A history of the municipal councils of Hong Kong : 1883-1999 : from the Sanitary Board to the Urban Council and the Regional Council. Leisure and Cultural Service Dept.
- Pepper, Suzanne (2008). Keeping Democracy at Bay:Hong Kong and the Challenge of Chinese Political Reform. Rowman & Littlefield.