HK democrats romp to local poll landslide

Winning candidate Kelvin Lam and activist Joshua Wong greet people and thank them for their support, outside of South Horizons Station, in Hong Kong, China on Nov. 25. REUTERS/LEAH MILLIS
Winning candidate Kelvin Lam and activist Joshua Wong greet people and thank them for their support, outside of South Horizons Station, in Hong Kong, China on Nov. 25. REUTERS/LEAH MILLIS

HONG KONG – Democrats romped to a landslide and symbolic majority in district council elections here after residents turned out in record numbers on Sunday to vote, following six months of anti-government protests. 

Democratic candidates across the city of 7.4-million people secured over half of the 452 district council seats for the first time against the opposition.

The voting ended with no major disruptions in a day.

Pro-democracy candidates secured a clear majority by 8 a.m. (midnight GMT Sunday) with 333 of 452 seats, compared with 52 for the pro-establishment camp, according to media estimates. Democrats only secured around 100 seats at the previous polls four years ago.

Almost 3-million people have voted – a record turnout of over 71 percent.

Hong Kong’s district councils control some spending and decide a range of livelihood issues such as transport.

They also serve as an important grassroots platform to radiate political influence in the Chinese-ruled city.(Reuters)

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