Christopher Chung

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The Honourable
Christopher Chung Shu-kun
BBS, JP
鍾樹根
180px
Member of the Legislative Council
Assumed office
10 October 2012
Preceded by Audrey Eu
Constituency Hong Kong Island
Chairman of the Eastern District Council
In office
6 January 2012 – 28 November 2012
Preceded by Christina Ting
Succeeded by Wong Kin-pan
Personal details
Born (1957-03-31) 31 March 1957 (age 67)
Hong Kong
Political party Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong
Alma mater Glasgow Caledonian University (BSc)
University of Wales, Newport (now the University of South Wales) (MBA)
Occupation Legislative Councillor

Christopher Chung Shu-kun, BBS, JP (Chinese: 鍾樹根; born 31 March 1957) is a member of Legislative Council of Hong Kong since 2012, representing Hong Kong Island. He is also former chairman of Eastern District Council, and a former councillor from 1991 to 2015, representing Yue Wan constituency. He is a veteran member of Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, the flagship pro-Beijing party in Hong Kong.[1]

Political career

Chung was born in Hong Kong in 1957. He was inspired by Mao Zedong Thought when he was young and joined the pro-Beijing organisation Hok Yau Club in 1974, where he went on becoming the president. During the 1980s when the colonial government introduced elections to the District Boards, he participated in the discussion in the club which decided not to participate.[2]

He first contested in the 1988 District Board elections, where he initially considered standing in North Point, but switched with Chan Yuen-han and ran in Chai Wan, where he lost the Reform Club's Brook Bernacchi and nonpartisan Wong Ming-kuen.[2] In 1989, Chung represented the club to join the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 in China but left after a half year.[2]

He was first elected to the Eastern District Board in 1991 through Chai Wan East. He joined the newly established Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), the flagship pro-Beijing party in 1993. He went on to become the chairman of the party branch in Hong Kong Island East. He was also one of the last Urban Councillor elected in 1995 until the council was abolished in 2000.

Since the 1998 Legislative Council election, he had been nominated in the DAB party list in Hong Kong Island placing after party's big names such as Cheng Kai-nam, Choy So-yuk, Ma Lik and Tsang Yok-sing. In 2000, after DAB legislator Cheng Kai-nam resigned soon right the 2000 Legislative Council election after he was suspected of corruption. The party nominated Chung as the candidate for the by-election against barrister Audrey Eu who was supported by the pro-democracy camp. Chung received more than 78,000 votes, 37 percent of the total votes and was defeated by Eu.

Chung was briefly chairman of the Eastern District Council in 2012. He was then nominated by the party to lead a candidate list in the 2012 Legislative Council election, while another DAB list was led by Legislative Council President Tsang Yok-sing. Both DAB lists successfully win a seat, while Chung's list received nearly 34,000 votes and took the fourth out of nine seats in Hong Kong Island.

Chung was famous for making mistakes in his speeches in the Legislative Council. In 2013, he was accused of making racist comments in a LegCo debate, during which he described foreigners as "flawed by nature", that they "knew nothing about Hongkong" and therefore were not fit to manage the West Kowloon Cultural District project.[3]

He was surprisingly defeated by Chui Chi-kin, an "umbrella soldier" inspired by the 2014 Hong Kong protests almost unknown to the public before he was elected in the 2015 District Council election with 2,017 votes against Chung's 1,829 votes in Yue Wan, which ended his 25-year service as District Councillor.

He was initially in the party's candidate list for the 2016 Legislative Council election but was dropped as the party decided to field only one candidate list in Hong Kong Island led by Horace Cheung. He protested the party's decision and considered running as an independent.[4]

Personal life

Chung worked in the information technology field after graduated from secondary school, in which he had worked at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the Hong Kong Jockey Club until he became full-time district councillor in 1999.[2] At the age of 47, he went back to school, studying master degrees at the Glasgow Caledonian University and the University of Wales. He studied his doctoral degree in Business Administration at the London South Bank University since 2011 but has stopped his study due to the 2012 election.[2]

His wife is a retired Chinese teacher and his daughter is an English teacher.[2]

References

  1. Live coverage: Pan-democrats hold on to veto power in Legco
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lawmakers veto WKCD scrutiny
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Political offices
Preceded by Member of the Eastern District Board
Representative for Chai Wan North
1991–1994
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of the Eastern District Council
Representative for Yue Wan
1994–2015
Succeeded by
Chui Chi-kin
New constituency Member of the Urban Council
Representative for Chai Wan East
1995–1997
Replaced by Provisional Urban Council
New creation Member of the Provisional Urban Council
1997–1999
Council abolished
Preceded by Chairman of the Eastern District Council
2012
Succeeded by
Wong Kin-pan
Legislative Council of Hong Kong
Preceded by Member of Legislative Council
Representative for Hong Kong Island
2012–present
Incumbent
Order of precedence
Preceded by
Felix Chung
Member of the Legislative Council
Hong Kong order of precedence
Member of the Legislative Council
Succeeded by
Tony Tse
Member of the Legislative Council