Agnes Lam out, José Coutinho wins 2 seats
Yesterday’s election of the Legislative Assembly’s (AL) 14 directly-elected seats resulted in seven newcomers to the hemicycle, while one failed in her re-election bid, incumbent lawmaker-cum-mass media scholar Agnes Lam Iok Fong.
After all the candidates of three electoral lists from the so-called “pro-democracy” camp were disqualified by the Legislative Assembly Electoral Affairs Commission (CAEAL) in early July, candidates from the “pro-establishment” camp were the major winners of yesterday’s direct election.
The three “pro-democracy” lists and two other lists were disqualified for failing to uphold the Macau Basic Law or having been disloyal to the Macau Special Administrative Region (MSAR). Consequently, only 14 lists, which fielded 126 candidates, were running in yesterday’s direct election.
Yesterday’s direct election recorded the lowest number of candidacy lists since the establishment of the MSAR, which held its first direct and indirect Legislative Assembly elections in 2001.
As a result, the 14 lawmakers elected yesterday only came from seven candidacy lists, with one list winning three seats and one list garnering just one seat, while the other five lists each won two seats.
The Macau United Citizens Association (ACUM) list, headed by incumbent lawmaker-cum-civic leader Si Ka Lon, 43, won three seats. The list’s number-two candidate, incumbent legislator-cum-civic leader Becky Song Pek Kei, 36, was re-elected, while its number-three candidate, Lei Leong Wong, 35, was elected for the first time yesterday.
This was the second time the ACUM list won three seats. The list, which was headed by prominent businessman Chan Meng Kam when it first ran in the direct election in 2005, won three seats in the 2013 direct election.
Chan did not seek re-election four years ago.
The ACUM list has been set up by the Alliance for Common People Building Up Macau (API) – one of the city’s biggest community associations, which is generally regarded as representing the city’s sizeable Fujianese community. According to some local researchers’ estimates, Fujianese account for about one-quarter of the local resident population.
The final result of yesterday’s direct election was announced shortly after 2 a.m. today.
It has been rare for a candidacy list to win three directly-elected seats.
In yesterday’s direct election, the ACUM list garnered the highest number of votes, at 26,593, consequently enabling three of its candidates to be elected.
The Union for Development (UPD) list, headed by incumbent lawmaker-cum-unionist Ella Lei Cheng I, 40, won the second highest number of votes, at 23,760, enabling Lei and her fellow legislator-cum-legislator Leong Sun Iok to be re-elected.
The UPD list is the electoral vehicle of the Macau Federation of Trade Unions (commonly known as Gung Luen in Cantonese) – one of the city’s biggest community associations. The list has won one or two seats every direct legislative election since it first took part in 1992, when Macau was still under Portuguese administration.
Both Ella Lei and Leong are Gung Luen senior board members.
Incumbent lawmaker José Maria Pereira Coutinho, who has been a directly-elected lawmaker since 2005, succeeded in his re-election bid yesterday. In addition, the New Hope list headed by Coutinho, 64, won two seats yesterday, because of which its number-two candidate Che Sai Wang, 55, a public servant, was elected for the first time yesterday. Coutinho heads the influential Macau Civil Servants Association (ATFPM). His group had also won two seats in the 2013 election.
Incumbent lawmaker Zheng Anting, 47, who has been a directly-elected legislator since 2013, also succeeded in his re-election bid yesterday. This time Zheng headed the Macau-Guangdong Union (UMG) list as incumbent lawmaker-cum-building contractor Mak Soi Kun did not seek re-election. The list’s number-two candidate this time Lo Choi In, 48, a senior bank executive, was elected as a lawmaker for the first time.
This time, the Progress Promotion Union (UPP) list, the electoral vehicle of the influential Macau General Union of Neighbourhood Associations (commonly known as Kai Fong in Cantonese), won two seats, enabling Leong Hong Sai, 54, and Ngan Iek Hang, 37, to be elected as lawmakers for the first time. Incumbent lawmaker-cum-banker Alan Ho Ion Sang, who had headed the UPP list since the 2009 direct election, did not seek re-election. Alan Ho was elected as an indirectly-elected lawmaker yesterday.
Also, this time, the Alliance for a Happy Home list, the electoral vehicle of the Macau Women’s General Association (commonly known as Fu Luen in Cantonese), also won two seats. Consequently, incumbent lawmaker-cum-nurse Wong Kit Cheng, 39, was re-elected, and the list’s number-two candidate Ma Io Fong, 37, a teacher by profession, was elected as a lawmaker for the first time.
The Power of Synergy list, which was running in the direct election for the second time after almost winning a seat four years ago, won one seat yesterday, because of which current affairs commentator Ron Lam Tou, 40, was elected as a lawmaker for the first time. The Power of Synergy list was the only list that won one seat in yesterday’s direct election.
Agnes Lam, the only incumbent lawmaker who failed in her re-election bid yesterday, was first elected in the direct election four years ago after she had failed in her first and second election bids in 2009 and 2013.
Agnes Lam Iok Fong, 49, is an associate professor at the University of Macau’s (UM) Department of Communications. Lam, a former journalist, has headed the Civic Watch list since 2009.
The voter turnout was 42.38 percent yesterday (137,279 voters), the lowest turnout since the establishment of the Macau Special Administrative Region (MSAR) in 1999. A total of 3,141 votes were blank, while about 2,000 were invalid, according to the Electoral Affairs Commission.
(Source: CAEAL)