424
Han Zhai
Kong is deemed more ‘restrictive’ in terms of the Legislative Council and
the Chief Executive.
96
However, in regard to the impeachment conducted
by the Legislative Council against the Chief Executive, even the motion of
impeachment must be passed by a two-thirds majority of all members of the
Legislative Council.
97
In fact, the interplay between the Chief Executive and
the legislature is a fundamental issue of Hong Kong’s political structure. On
the one hand, the Chief Executive leading the civil service bureaucracy is
accountable to the central government through the central appointment pro-
cess; on the other hand, the democratic process for locally electing legislators
and political parties is becoming increasingly inflexible. The tension between
these two formulates the ‘halfway house’ within Hong Kong’s political system,
founded by the Basic Law of the Hong Kong SAR.
98
In other words, the Basic
Law establishes a government that is ‘answerable’ to the Legislative Council
rather than accountable to it.
99
In practice, the problematic design of the Chief Executive’s accountabil-
ity could be accurately presented correlatively through the universal suffrage
issue. Since Article 45 of the Basic Law of the Hong Kong SAR reads that the
candidates for Chief Executive should be nominated by a special committee,
the way to achieve universal suffrage based on that article has been a central
part of the subsequent Chief Executive’s political reform proposals after 1997.
These reforms gained the most opposition from Hong Kong residents who
want ‘one person, one vote’ and consider the elective committee to be the
mechanism for central control. In 2004 and 2014, the Standing Committee of
the NPC made an interpretation on the Basic Law of the Hong Kong SAR and
one decision that substantially amended the universal suffrage proposed in the
Basic Law of the Hong Kong SAR.
100
96
See Yin Yi fen, ‘The Restrictive and Cooperative Relationship between the Legislature and the
Chief Executive in Hong Kong and Macau’ (2008) 49 Macau Studies 35. [邓奋益:“港澳地区
立法会于行政长官的制约配合关系
”,《澳门研究》第49期,第35-39页。]
97
Article 73(9), Basic Law of the Hong Kong SAR (1990).
98
Albert H. Y. Chen, ‘The Theory, Constitution and Practice of Autonomy: The Case of Hong
Kong’ in Jorge Oliveira and Paulo Cardinal (eds.), One Country, Two Systems, Three Legal
Orders: Perspectives of Evolution (Berlin, London: Springer, 2009) 764.
99
Ian Schott, ‘The Government and Statutory Bodies in Hong Kong: Centralisation and
Autonomy’ (2006) Public Organization Review 185, 189.
100
Secretariat of the Legislative Council, ‘A Brief Overview on the Interpretations Made by the
Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress According to Article 158 of the Basic
Law’ 3
www.legco.gov.hk/yr11-12/chinese/sec/library/1112in29-c.pdf
. The 2014 ‘8·31’ Decision
www.2017.gov.hk/filemanager/template/tc/doc/20140831a.pdf
.