Demosistō
Demosistō 香港眾志 | |
---|---|
Chairman | Nathan Law |
Vice-Chairman | Oscar Lai |
Secretary-General | Joshua Wong |
Founded | 10 April 2016 |
Preceded by | Scholarism |
Ideology |
Direct democracy Liberalism (Hong Kong) Social progressivism |
Political position | Centre-left |
Regional affiliation | Pan-democracy camp |
Colours | Turquoise |
Legislative Council |
0 / 70 |
District Councils |
0 / 458 |
Website | |
www | |
Demosistō (/ˌdɛməˈsɪstoʊ/; Chinese: 香港眾志)[1] is a political party in Hong Kong established on 10 April 2016. Led by the former leaders of Scholarism, Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow and Oscar Lai and former secretary-general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students (HKFS) Nathan Law, the two student activist groups which played an instrumental role in the 79-day occupy protests known as the Umbrella Revolution in 2014.[2]
The party advocates for a referendum to determine Hong Kong's sovereignty after 2047, when the One Country, Two Systems principle as promised in the Sino-British Joint Declaration and the Hong Kong Basic Law is supposed to expire. It also plans to contest in the 2016 Legislative Council election.[2]
Beliefs
The party proposes four major missions: self-initiation, self-standing, autonomy and self-determination.[3]
- Self-initiation: The party aims at being a movement-based party as an extension of social activism. It proposes to establish a a petition system, providing a channel for direct political discussions between the residents and the party in a bottom-up approach, and allows the residents to form their own proposals of social changes (similar to Podemos in Spain).[3]
- Self-standing: The party aims at shaping the character of Hong Kong and embracing multiplicity. It proposes to construct an analysis of Hong Kong’s present and an imagination of its future based on Hong Kong's historical experiences, and liberate Hong Kong people from the dictating, imperialistic governance of the Communist Party of China, without falling into the emotionally-appealing trap of populism that divides among "us" and "them" based on nationality. It also proposes that the local history of Hong Kong be fairly evaluated and educated to the public.[3]
- Autonomy: The party aims at standing up for the value of multiplicity and social progressiveness, to protect the vulnerable, including sexual minorities and the youth in society; and up for progressive policies, as to urge the government to take up their responsibility to offer social protection to all people in need. It also aims at encouraging Hong Kong people to discuss and form a consensus on their future social, economic and political arrangements after 2047 when the One Country, Two Systems principle as promised in the Sino-British Joint Declaration and the Hong Kong Basic Law is supposed to expire.[3]
- Determination: The party stresses Hong Kong people's right of self-determination as stated in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. It aims at launching a ten-year project of organising a "Charter of Hong Kong", reshaping a new, self-governing constitution and socio-political order for the city. It estimates that Hong Kong must start with the deliberation and fight for their right on the question of the city's sovereignty, the "Second Question of Hong Kong", by 2030.[3]
Background
The name is derived from the Greek "demo" (δημο, meaning "people" in which English word "democracy" derived from) and Latin "sisto" (meaning "to stand" in which English words such as "insist", "persist" and "resist" derived from). Literally translated as "people to stand" in English, it means "stand for democracy", or "stand for the people".[4] The Chinese name means "the will of the people".[1][5][6]
The idea of forming a party was inspired by Taiwan's New Power Party which was formed by the Sunflower Movement leaders and fared well in the 2016 Taiwanese legislative election. In February 2016, core figures of the student activist group Scholarism – Joshua Wong, Oscar Lai and Agnes Chow – who played an instrumental role in the 2014 Hong Kong protests, announced their plan of forming a new political party with other Umbrella Movement leaders, including Nathan Law, former secretary-general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students (HKFS), to run in the September Legislative Council election.[7] Scholarism officially ceased functioning on 20 March 2016 as the group disallowed any party affiliation.[8]
The party was officially established on 10 April 2016 with former secretary-general of Hong Kong Federation of Students Nathan Law Kwun-chung as chairman, former spokesman of Scholarism Oscar Lai as vice-chairman, former convenor as Joshua Wong as secretary-general and former core member Agnes Chow Ting as deputy secretary. Founding party members included Shu Kei, Dean of Film and Television at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts as party's executive committee member, teacher Ng Mei-lan and Hong Kong Unison's Fermi Wong Wai-fun as member of the Kowloon East team.[9]
References
- 1 2 "黃之鋒周庭新政黨Demosistō 中文名曝光". Apple Daily. 6 April 2016.
- 1 2 "Joshua Wong's party named 'Demosisto'". Radio Television Hong Kong. 6 April 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Mission". Demosistō.
- ↑ "Joshua Wong to launch new political party, Demosistō, Sunday". Ejnisight. 7 April 2016.
- ↑ "黃之鋒新政黨英文名Demosistō 中文是「釘毛舌圖」?". HK01. 6 April 2016.
- ↑ "新政黨Demosistō係咩意思? 黃之鋒教埋你點讀". Apple Daily. 6 April 2016.
- ↑ "效法時代力量突圍 香港學運領袖擬組黨參政". Liberty Times. 17 February 2016.
- ↑ "學民思潮宣布今天起停止運作 145萬捐款將撥予法援基金及新學生組織". Stand News. 20 March 2016.
- ↑ "香港眾志成立 羅冠聰、舒琪、黎汶洛出選立會". Stand News. 10 April 2016.
External links
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