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侯爵府

積分: 21208

15週年勳章 親子王國15週年勳章 親子王國15週年勳章


1#
發表於 17-4-3 01:32 |只看該作者

By Mark Pinkstone – Chief Information Officer for Regina Ip’s campaign


The recent chief executive (CE) election makes one commonly known, but not spoken about, point: It is all controlled by the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government.


The whole election protocol is a farce. Half way through 2016, the Central People’s Government decided to anoint chief secretary for administration Carrie Lam as CE to succeed the policies of Leung Chun-ying. And although she appeared coy and uninterested in the job, preferring to look after her family, she knew her destiny was to run Hong Kong. Her future had been foretold.


Once that was decided by Beijing, the job of pushing through the process was left to the Liaison Office in The Westpoint, Sai Ying Pun.


Wikipedia states that the Liaison Office exists to promote the pro-Beijing United Front and coordinates pro-Beijing candidates, mobilises supporters to vote for “patriotic” political parties, and clandestinely orchestrates electoral campaigns. It supervises the mainland’s enterprises and three pro-Beijing newspapers, Ta Kung Pao, Wen Wei Pao and Commercial Daily in Hong Kong. It is also responsible for running the Chinese Communist Party cells in Hong Kong.


But Lam was not a popular civil servant. She was known to be tough and capable of getting the job done but her toughness brought her enemies within the civil service and the public. Her handling of the students in the Occupy Central protests drew grave criticism. The job of the Liaison Office was to mend fences. A gift was needed. During December 2016 Lam made frequent trips to Beijing to discuss “cultural” matters (a diplomatic term for clandestine operations).


On December 23, she returned to Hong Kong with a gift from the Central Government, a HK$3.5 billion replica of the famed Palace Museum. Although Hong Kong people hailed the gift, many criticised the secrecy involved, including the location (replacing a much-needed centre for performing arts) and appointment of the lead architect. The Palace Museum gift was the springboard to Lam’s foray in the CE race.


Then lo and behold within two weeks she announced her decision to resign from the SAR Government and run for the post of CE. Within a week, Mrs Lam’s resignation was accepted. Another contender John Tsang, who resigned as financial secretary a month earlier had to wait in purgatory for its acceptance after Lam. Suddenly the chief executive was abandoned by his generals and had to urgently find replacements to present the 2017/18 Budget and run the administration.


Meanwhile, two other contenders – former Judge Woo Kwok-hing and legislator Regina Ip – announced their intentions to run in mid-December. Woo has no alliance with any political group and has been basically advocating for political reform. Ip, on the other hand, has wide political experience having served on both the Legislative and Executive Councils, formed a political party – the New People’s Party – and had a long civil service history finishing as secretary for security. Overall, she had the best credentials of all. However the public still remembered her failed attempts for security reforms.


But the Liaison Office was not happy with Tsang and Ip joining the race as both threatened the success of Lam. They offered Tsang the job as CEO of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank launched by the Central Government. He declined, preferring to run for CE. Ip was offered the presidency of the Legislative Council and posts in Beijing but she too declined, preferring the CE job. The Liaison Office had come to a stalemate; neither of the threats would quit the race.


The propaganda machine came into play. National People’s Congress delegates – former secretary for justice and deputy chair of the Basic Law Drafting Committee Elsie Leung, provisional president of the Legislative Council in 1997 Rita Fan and others – publicly restated, under instructions of the Liaison Office, Beijing’s desire that there shall be only two or three candidates for the chief executive post. One had to go.


The biggest threat to Lam was Ip because of her experience and thorough manifesto so she was the obvious choice to be thrown under the bus. The pressure was on. Phone calls from the Liaison Office or associates were made to every member of the nominating committee not to nominate Ip and to give their weight to Lam.


Legislator Michael Tien, deputy to Ip, spoke publicly about a call from the “invisible hand” (the Liaison Office) to give support to Lam. Civic Party lawmaker Dennis Kwok, co-ordinator of 300+ pan democratic votes said on TVB’s Straight Talk that he had heard of many such reports of calls from the Invisible Hand. Ip said she had calls from friends who wanted to support her but were told by their bosses not to.


All candidates were canvassing hard in the run-up to the nominating period. During her 77-day campaign, Ip met with 137 election committee members, non-government and various other organisations, attended 21 forums, 49 public events, 45 media interviews and produced a 20,000-word manifesto. Tsang and Woo took to the streets raising their public profiles and Tsang, in fact, secured much more popular support than Lam.


Lam, on the other hand, relied solely on the Liaison Office and her campaign team to secure about 400 nominations before releasing her manifesto two days before the close of nominations. At the close on March 1, Lam had received 580 votes, Woo 180 and Tsang 165. Ip withdrew just before the close due to lack of nominations. The Liaison Office had won.


On March 16, the SCMP reported that Beijing’s No. 3 official persuaded the powerful Li Ka-shing family, previously believed to be supporters of John Tsang, to back the former chief secretary. The Post quoted a source with knowledge of the matter saying that Li and his tycoon sons, Victor Li Tzar-kuoi and Richard Li Tzar-kai, shared a meal with National People’s Congress chairman Zhang Dejiang in Shenzhen last month. During the gathering the three were asked to cast their ballots for Lam and they agreed to back the former chief secretary, who is Beijing’s preferred candidate.


Almost every weekend prior to the elections clandestine meetings were held in Shenzhen with Beijing officials, members of the Hong Kong Liaison Office and election committee members to discuss the outcome of the March 26 chief executive elections. No names were ever mentioned for fear of reprisal.


So the elections were held and Beijing pulled off the 777 jackpot with its chosen winner. No surprises there.


Under the “One Country, Two Systems” principle and Hong Kong’s Basic Law Article 22 : “No department of the Central People’s Government and no province, autonomous region, or municipality directly under the Central Government may interfere in the affairs which the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region administers on its own in accordance with this Law.”


The Liaison Office has clearly violated Article 22 by interfering with the election process, and the Central Government has lost all trust of the Hong Kong people in maintaining the One Country Two Systems principle.





補充內容 (17-4-3 03:04):
https://www.hongkongfp.com/2017/ ... xecutive-elections/
ALL ANIMALS ARE EQUAL, BUT SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS.


侯爵府

積分: 20248


19#
發表於 17-4-6 20:01 |只看該作者
樓主,等你表演吓,盲人如何比人看得更清呀
永遠不要和白痴爭辯,因為他會把你的智商拉到和他同一水平,然後用豐富的經驗打敗你。


大宅

積分: 1887


18#
發表於 17-4-5 09:13 |只看該作者

回覆樓主:

樓主,點解民主大國都係兩黨操控參選人嘅?
點解唔可以係黨員都可以參加被大衆選民選擇架? 你可唔可以做好心話比我知。 如你可以,我非常感謝你架


琥珀宮

積分: 169242


17#
發表於 17-4-4 23:19 |只看該作者

回覆樓主:

我用手機睇,英文字打橫行掃到我手痛,中文粒粒的式慳好多位,亦慳我手力。

冇心機睇,斷估重點係中央操控特首選舉,咁點?港督選都冇得選,咪又咁過。如果講外國操控到香港個特首選舉,反而係新聞。香港係中國地方,其他地方都冇選舉,由中央直接任命,咁又如何?


侯爵府

積分: 20248


16#
發表於 17-4-4 14:43 |只看該作者
Zenia 發表於 17-4-3 19:47
1. 利誘 JT 同 R. Ip 唔選失敗,所以就全力阻止全部商界、建制派畀票佢兩個,成功令一個衹得少部分商界票 ...
叻呀
永遠不要和白痴爭辯,因為他會把你的智商拉到和他同一水平,然後用豐富的經驗打敗你。


男爵府

積分: 7284

2018復活節勳章 瞓得好勳章 開心吸收勳章 最關心BB問題熱投勳章


15#
發表於 17-4-4 10:15 |只看該作者
"The Liaison Office has clearly violated Article 22 by interfering with the election process, and the Central Government has lost all trust of the Hong Kong people in maintaining the One Country Two Systems principle"




Big words. Empty meaning. Typical Wong C style!!!


珍珠宮

積分: 32678


14#
發表於 17-4-4 09:52 |只看該作者
重有咁多打手既!


翡翠宮

積分: 78926

母親節2025勳章 2025勳章蛇年勳章 2024年龍年勳章 2018復活節勳章 親子王國15週年勳章 親子王國15週年勳章


13#
發表於 17-4-4 08:16 |只看該作者
牛子 發表於 17-4-4 07:11
你咪一見到標題就好開心亂post先得架
英文唔好就去進修下啦
成篇文都係葉太反駁pinkstone ge言論, pinksto ...
Ctrl C & V 而已, 你要求太高


禁止訪問

積分: 12303


12#
發表於 17-4-4 07:11 |只看該作者
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽


子爵府

積分: 13773

好媽媽勳章


11#
發表於 17-4-3 19:51 |只看該作者
中文報無嘢post,現在要post埋英文報了


侯爵府

積分: 21208

15週年勳章 親子王國15週年勳章 親子王國15週年勳章


10#
發表於 17-4-3 19:47 |只看該作者
ok_ko 發表於 17-4-3 12:13
篇文讓我看到了兩樣野:

1. 篇文話中聯辦怕John Tsang/Regina 搶了林鄭的大部分票,然後利誘他們。他們都 ...


1. 利誘 JT 同 R. Ip 唔選失敗,所以就全力阻止全部商界、建制派畀票佢兩個,成功令一個衹得少部分商界票,另一個連閘都入唔到,因而體驗到被操控嘅小圈子選舉嘅不公。

2. 上次贏咗咪第一時間鬼鼠入中聯囉。




Anyway..........

Regina Ip distances herself from ex-aide’s claims of Beijing election ‘interference’

Lawmaker Regina Ip has distanced herself from an opinion piece written by a former election media aide about the chief executive election.


Mark Pinkstone – who was chief information officer for Ip’s leadership campaign – wrote in a comment piece published by HKFP on Sunday that the chief executive election was controlled by Beijing’s organ in Hong Kong – the China Liaison Office: “The whole election protocol is a farce.”


Pinkstone said that Ip had no knowledge of him writing the piece, and that his words represented his own thoughts and were not necessarily the view of anyone else connected with her campaign.


“Mark wrote the article without telling me in advance – it was only based on his personal conjecture, and I have no comment on the veracity of his observations,” Ip said.


Ip said Pinkstone had apologised to her for putting her in an “embarrassing” situation.


Beijing interference


Pinkstone wrote that the Liaison Office had “clearly violated” Article 22 of the Basic Law which stipulated that no Chinese authorities under the central government may interfere in Hong Kong affairs.


Ip said she believed there was room to interpret the article in different ways.


“For instance, the arrangements of an election held by the Registration and Electoral Office are, of course, under our autonomy. But the appointee for chief executive must, of course, have a high level of trust from the central government – it is not a violation of the Basic Law for [Beijing] to say who can be supported and who cannot,” Ip said.


Pinkstone, also the former government chief information officer, wrote that Beijing decided in mid-2016 to “anoint” then-chief secretary Carrie Lam.


Ip disagreed: “If I knew I wouldn’t have run.”


Pinkstone also wrote that phone calls from the Liaison Office or associates were made to every member of the election committee instructing them to nominate Lam over Ip.


“I believe he read many reports from the media. No [electors] told me that,” Ip said, adding that some sectors’ electors have to follow the voting preference of the groups they represent.


“Surely, it is not easy to find the best way for the central government to express [its choice], whilst maintaining its sovereignty and not affecting Hong Kong people’s trust in the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ principle.”


Job offers


In the article, Pinkstone asserted that Ip was offered the presidency of the Legislative Council and posts in Beijing by the Liaison Office, but she declined.


In response, Ip said many people were asking to be the president: “But for me, there was no case of offering me something in exchange for the chief executive election run.”




Asked why Pinkstone chose to describe the election as a “farce,” Ip said it was his own personal opinion: “I do not agree with this remark.”


She said Pinkstone was not a member of her New People’s Party and he was invited to the campaign team to help her fix English in her releases. The contract between them has ended, she added.


https://www.hongkongfp.com/2017/04/03/regina-ip-distances-ex-aides-claims-beijing-election-interference/



ALL ANIMALS ARE EQUAL, BUT SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS.


男爵府

積分: 8037


9#
發表於 17-4-3 13:46 |只看該作者
Zenia 發表於 17-4-3 01:32
By Mark Pinkstone – Chief Information Officer for Regina Ip’s campaign
The recent chief executive ...

香港的一些政治現實,即係有個國家撐泛民,有個國家撐建制,相信好多人都了解。
[img align=left]C:\my documents\IMG_1427_1_1_1[/img] [img align=right]C:\my documents\DSCN1156 10-04-2004_1_4_1[/img]


大宅

積分: 4692


8#
發表於 17-4-3 13:25 |只看該作者
其實Basic Law article 22設計得非常精巧,"No department of the Central People's Government...",但問題係中聯辦算得上係「中央人民政府所屬各部門」嗎?


從廣義上講:係,因為佢屬於國務院序列;從狹義上講:唔係,因為佢並非一個「部」

所以Basic Law從來冇明示過,中聯辦唔可以介入香港


水晶宮

積分: 71261

2025勳章蛇年勳章 牛年勳章 hashtag影視迷勳章


7#
發表於 17-4-3 12:31 |只看該作者
民主大國老美都有invisible hand 啦


禁止訪問

積分: 12736


6#
發表於 17-4-3 12:14 |只看該作者
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽


子爵府

積分: 11364

2023年兔年勳章 虎到金來勳章 牛年勳章 畀面勳章 開心吸收勳章


5#
發表於 17-4-3 12:13 |只看該作者
篇文讓我看到了兩樣野:

1. 篇文話中聯辦怕John Tsang/Regina 搶了林鄭的大部分票,然後利誘他們。他們都不接受,而且盡力爭選。結果是一個入不了閘,而且極可能是低雙位數。另一個搶了建制少于50票。這個結果,清楚一點說是中央利誘他們是多餘。中央以林鄭做膽,以“有形之手”,根本無須跟他們談。不過如果最後對決的是John Tsang vs Regina , 可能 Regina 連 777 票都無。

2. 這次輸了就數落中聯辦。爲何上次做票后時,又沒有批評中聯辦?

葉劉心,確實難測!
Believe those who are seeking the truth. Doubt those who find it.


侯爵府

積分: 20248


4#
發表於 17-4-3 10:26 |只看該作者
牛子 發表於 17-4-3 09:53
咦今次唔PO中文, 懶係高檔po英文喎
不過, 又係唔發表任何自己意見
樓主可能怕好似上次英國醉酒佬單嘢咁啩


嘅然隻invisible hand又電話又李+X飯局又共產組織咁,薯片叔叔仲發埋啲春秋大夢,又黃金握手呀咁,真係勁6+1囉


支持葉太,亦支持林鄭
永遠不要和白痴爭辯,因為他會把你的智商拉到和他同一水平,然後用豐富的經驗打敗你。


禁止訪問

積分: 12303


3#
發表於 17-4-3 09:53 |只看該作者
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽
提示: 作者被禁止或刪除 內容自動屏蔽


翡翠宮

積分: 78926

母親節2025勳章 2025勳章蛇年勳章 2024年龍年勳章 2018復活節勳章 親子王國15週年勳章 親子王國15週年勳章


2#
發表於 17-4-3 09:15 |只看該作者
專門搞分化, 令社會無日安寧, 就係你呢D人囉, 真係唔知你收左乜好處,


支持林鄭

點評

cissie    發表於 17-4-9 00:17

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