FAQ 5 for the aborted Occupy Central poll:
How can you prevent “blue ribbon” supporters from voting?Each potential voter will need to sign a declaration saying they support the Umbrella Movement. We welcome blue ribbon people to support the Umbrella Movement.
Not as silly as it sounds, IMO. Actually, to quote Admiral Akhbar, It’s A
Trap!
Specifically, if blues wanted to “freep” the poll en masse in an attempt to vote down the
proposals, it would be at the cost of swelling the ranks of putative Umbrella
Movement supporters.
Other than "democracy", another pair of words that had a hard time navigating the
epistemological shoals are “proposed” and “offered” in referring to
representations made by the HKSAR government side during the televised dialogue
on October 22, as in:
“Lam
also offered to send a supplementary report to Beijing addressing the views of
protesters” (McClatchy)
Or
Hong Kong protesters plan to hold a straw poll on government proposals
they rejected earlier in the week (Reuters)
What Carrie Lam actually said was:
我们愿意考虑向中央提交一个报告,将在8月底之后的按全国人大常委决定,在本 港发生的事和表达诉求制成报告,交给国务院港澳办,各位在这段时间内表达的意见和关注,透过特区政府的报告交给中央,给他们参考。这是我们这次会面的回 应。
We are
willing to consider delivering a report to the center [on the concerns and
demands of students raised since the NPC Standing Committee announced its
posture on popular nomination on August 31]…this is our response at this
meeting.
And
港府同意直接向港府反映学生运动带出的关注和诉求,我们正在积极考虑如何在五部曲宪制程序以外,向港澳办提交一份报告
The
Hong Kong government agrees to reflect to the Hong Kong [sic] government the
concerns and demands brought by the student movement. We are actively considering how to deliver a
report to the Hong & Macau Affairs Office outside of the five-step
constitution-revision process.
So the letter or whatever to the NPC is not a proposal or offer
to the students for them to accept or negotiate. It’s a unilateral concession--after the HKSAR gets done with its "considering".
NPR, among other outlets, got it right:
Lam said the Hong Kong
government is considering submitting a report to Beijing outlining the demands
and concerns of the protesters. She said the Chinese leadership could use it as
a "reference."
The other government gambit was to propose a multi-party platform,
in other words an expansion of the dialogue beyond the two current student and
government counterparties:
希望和大家进一步探讨成立讨论政改的多方平台。让社会各界,包括学生和年轻人,参加讨论
It is hoped
that everybody will further explore the establishment of a multi-party platform
to discuss governmental reform, and enable the various elements of society,
including students and youth, to participate in the discussion.
Since the students are already in the dialogue, this was an invitation
to other stakeholders, not just pro-democracy forces but also pro-Beijing
forces, to join the talking shop and engage in what the Chinese picturesquely
call a “spittle fight” that would sap the momentum and glamour of the
demonstrations and, presumably, make the Hong Kong populace sick to death of
the whole constitutional debate.
So this kind of framing, courtesy of the SCMP, is just plain wrong:
Student, Occupy leaders
announce vote on government’s reform proposals
Democratic exercise will ask whether students' federation
should accept the government's offers
Protesters in "Umbrella
Plaza", Admiralty, will be polled on whether student leaders should accept
the government's offers made at talks on Tuesday on ending nearly a month of
sit-ins.
This makes it sound like that the students led by Alex Chow had been
recognized by the HKSAR as a legitimate interlocutor and negotiating partner
and the referendum would approve or reject the government’s proposals or
offers made to them.
Negatory on that trajectory, as happy as the pro-dem forces were to
spin or be spun in that direction.
Actually, the referendum was intended to validate the leadership in its critique of the government initiatives, demonstrate that the
government had not succeeded in seducing the students with the sugar-coated
bullets it had dispensed during the televised dialogue, and the Occupiers were solidly
lined up against the government and behind their leaders.
“The government always
says that the students don’t represent the people in the plaza and Hong Kong
citizens, so we are here to make all our voices heard and we will tell the
government clearly what we think,” [said] Alex Chow
.
In the poll…, demonstrators will be
asked whether the government's offer to submit a report to the central
government's Hong Kong and Macau affairs office on the protests would have any
practical purpose.
Judging
by the LA
Times on Saturday, discussions seemed to meander in a way that would please
connoisseurs of genuine democracy, but perhaps had some of the organizers
tearing their hair:
The
exact wording of the poll has gone through multiple iterations. As of Saturday,
organizers said it would focus on two main questions – but will not ask people
whether or when they believe the sit-ins should end.
Right after the televised dialogue, the first report I saw was that
Benny Tai was talking about a relatively solid, straightforward referendum in
which the students either rejected the government approach and continued
civil disobedience (with the government’s concession already in the pocket, so
to speak) or endorsed the proposed mechanisms, declared victory, and withdrew.
(I confess I haven't been able to track the original report I remember, stating that Tai envisioned a withdrawal/no withdrawal structure, though the position is stated in this AP headline/lede from October 23, Hong Kong Protesters To Vote Whether Or Not To Stay In Streets: "Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong plan to hold a spot referendum Sunday on whether to stay in the streets or accept government offers for more talks and clear their protest camps.")
(I confess I haven't been able to track the original report I remember, stating that Tai envisioned a withdrawal/no withdrawal structure, though the position is stated in this AP headline/lede from October 23, Hong Kong Protesters To Vote Whether Or Not To Stay In Streets: "Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong plan to hold a spot referendum Sunday on whether to stay in the streets or accept government offers for more talks and clear their protest camps.")
An up/down vote on the HKSAR's initiative and whether or not the occupation should be continued would not have been a bad tactical move, in my opinion.
If there was a vote to “reject and stay,” demonstrator
opposition to the government’s blandishments would be resoundingly confirmed by
the vote and the HKSAR would have to come up with something better.
As to voting for the government and against its own
leadership and going home, maybe Benny Tai didn’t envision that contingency.
But if it the vote went the other way, well that’s
democracy. And at the very least, in dealings
between the government and the movement, the democratic camel’s got his nose in
the tent, soon to be followed, I expect, to be followed by the camel’s head,
hump, butt, tail, Mrs. Camel, and all the adorable baby camels, and
negotiations could very well turn into a non-stop vote-a-thon.
Reading between the lines, however, I think the
pro-democracy group got hung up on the possibility that the pro-Beijing crowd
would mobilize crowds of people to corrupt the vote in some fiasco and
send the demonstrators home profoundly pissed off at the opposition, the HKSAR,
and their own leadership, and unlikely to come out again.
By the end of the week, Benny Tai clearly repudiated any “stay
or go” implications for the referendum:
Mr. Tai said he hoped the vote would pressure the government to negotiate with protest leaders, but some protesters criticized the need for such a poll.
So withdrawal was Off the Menu! And replaced with a healthy
serving of mush.
The most recent
motions I saw announced motions on the @OCLPHK twitter feed were:
1. In the report to be submitted by the HKSAR Government to the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office of the State Council, it must include a suggestion that the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress reviews its August 31 decision. Choices: Agree, Disagree, Abstain
2. The multi-party platform for handling political reform controversies must handle the methods of the Legislative Council election in 2016 and the Chief Elective election in 2017. Choices: Agree Disagree Abstain
Helpfully, the Voter Requirement:
Voters must confirm they understand the contents of the two motions and support the Umbrella Movement.
But no poll tax! No
explicit literacy requirement! By this
standard, the Occupy Hong Kong has achieved 1950s Mississippi levels of direct
democracy. Indeed, it’s come very far in
a short time. Go Jim Crow!
OK, enough snark. But please note the presumably inadvertent parallel to the much derided "must love the Motherland and Hong Kong" qualification for serving as Chief Executive.
A classic case of desperately trying to please everybody
but in the end pleasing nobody. Not hard
to see why the referendum collapsed under its own weight.
This is a rather awkward juncture for Occupy Hong Kong.
“Continuing to obstruct public infrastructure in
contemptuous rejection of an inadequate concession” doesn’t have the same
galvanizing jolt as “flooding the streets to prevent the murder of Hong Kong
democracy”.
Add to that the fact that civil disobedience is now continuing
in a sort of anarcho-shambolic way, absent a formal general affirmation of the
position taken by the student leadership in response to the HKSAR’s initiative, let alone an explicit strategy. This state of affairs, I would assume, is not
particularly impressive to people who do not already share the
anarcho-shambolic civil disobedience mindset.
Benny Tai doesn’t look good, because it looks like he and
his allies in the student leadership can’t deliver unified, responsive
leadership of the pro-dem student movement, thereby allowing the HKSAR and PRC
to disparage his effectiveness and legitimacy as an interlocutor with the
government.
And, of course, it leaves the movement with the question of
What Next? The student leaders came out
of the televised dialogue rather well in terms of arguments, optics, and the sense
that the government had no choice but to engage with them.
I speculate that Benny Tai intended to give the escalation crank
another turn by rejecting the government’s response through the referendum, staying
in the streets, and thereby putting the onus on the HKSAR to come up with
something better. The referendum would
also give the movement something to build on: other elements could endorse its
vote, come out to support the students in the confrontation, in other words,
bring other potent forces, perhaps the pro-democracy union movement under Lee
Cheuk-yan, into play.
Instead, we get a Whole Lotta Meh.
The question of how to proceed will, I suspect, be answered
through hours of agitated chatter between student leaders, student followers,
and an increasingly frazzled adult leadership, ahem, excuse me, conveners with
some outside help…
…from the polls.
The Umbrella Movement may qualify as the most heavily polled
political upheaval in history—on both sides.
And that’s probably why it’s called the “Umbrella Movement”
today: because “Umbrella Revolution” didn’t poll well enough among the more
skittish Hong Kongers.
It
is not unlikely that polling, in addition to the conventional “waddya think”
internal polling needed to determine the movement’s strength and guide its
tactics, also includes the push-polling adored by American politicians, and I
would expect, promoted to Hong Kong in the interest of best practices by the
NED. You know, “Do you want to protect
your freedom, dignity, and prosperity by directly nominating your leaders, or
would you prefer to have a PLA tank run over your dog…before your
eyes…repeatedly.”
I
think I saw a taste of that in the dialogue, when the students invoked a poll
with the finding that "72% of respondents declared it was unacceptable
that only members of the pro-Beijing faction [a.k.a. people who would run your
tank over with a dog] could become candidates to become Chief Executive".
The
government seems to play the same game: "According to several polls, over
50% of respondents would be happy to have the gain of universal suffrage
'safely buttoned in their pocket'".
The Hong Kong Transition Project is a multinational initiative hosted by
Hong Kong Baptist University which receives support from the U.S. “National
Democratic Institute for International Affairs” (an NED affiliate). It proudly announces it has been polling on
constitutional issues since 1991.
A nice, recent example is this HKTP poll,
conducted at the beginning of 2014. It
devotes 8 pages of its 34 pages to the single issue of Carrie Lam, specifically
what demographic slices consider Carrie Lam a trustworthy steward of the
constitutional reform consultative process.
For instance, only 2% of housewives think Lam will be very unfair.
Then you get a breakdown of who supports plans to Occupy
Central.
Didja know, for instance, that other than the ultra rich, the
group that had the highest percentage of strongly opposed was the ultra poor
(33%)?
Another interesting tidbit: 90% of those polled said their
position on Occupy, pro or anti, would be unaffected by a declaration of
support by the pro-dem political faction.
So I guess that’s why we don’t see Alan Leong out on the barricades that
much.
And there’s a section on anxieties about damage to Hong Kong’s
economy from an Occupy movement. Good
news! 85% of Hong Kongers who ID pluralistic
and international are not worried at all!
Plenty to chew on concerning the political postures and strategies
that are playing out today.
On the other hand, questions about the constitutional issues
underlying Occupy: Zero. Nada. Zilch.
This poll is, at its heart, operational intelligence for the
Occupy movement. Suck on it, NED/NDI
defenders!
Polling seems to be everywhere, internal as well as public.
One of the revelations of the oppo dump of minutes from the
meetings of the Alliance for True Democracy is the commissioning of internal monthly
opinion polls from Hong Kong University’s Popular Opinion Programme, or HKU POP
at, well, HK$7000/pop.
HKU POP ran Occupy’s famous unofficial July 1 referendum on universal
suffrage. It also does a lot of interesting
public polling.
In what may be bad news for the pro-dems, HKU POP indicates
that popularity ratings for Lee Cheuk-yan—the union leader, Labour Party honcho,
Legco member, recipient of considerable largesse from Jimmy Lai and NDI,
and who may have been Occupy’s chosen champion for the next stage of
demonstrations—has sagged in recent months; and I’m assuming the October poll
was taken before the pro-Beijing media began hammering him with unflattering
tittle-tattle from a massive hack of his union’s e-mails.
The stridently pro-Beijing Regina Ip has taken a hit as
well; but the Legco President and discretely pro-Beijing Jasper Tsang has
apparently seen his popularity rise steadily —in fact, he’s the only one of the
“Top 5” councilors to show any improvement over the last few months--perhaps an
indication that Hong Kong public opinion prefers his more emollient style.
I’m sure there’s a lot of internal polling and parsing to
determine whether the various, well, since we can’t call them “leaders”, public
figures associated with the pro-democracy movement, guys like Alex Chow, Joshua
Wong, and, yes, Benny Tai are holding onto their favorability ratings, growing
the pie, or *gulp* finding out that non-stop exposure is nudging them into the
dreaded “familiarity breeds contempt” territory.
And polling will be decisive if and when Benny Tai deploys
what I personally believe is his “nuclear option”: a demand that a formal
citywide vote be conducted to determine the Hong Kong electorate’s preferences
on popular nomination, thereby giving the HKSAR zero wiggle room in spinning
the state of local opinion to the NPC.
That day will certainly be further off, thanks to this week’s
referendum debacle.
I don’t think Occupy Hong Kong, or its many allies, are
bereft of hope, determination, popularity, or recourse. But right now it seems to have a momentum and
unity deficit (wonder what the polls say!).
What the OHK brain trust does in the next few days will
determine if the referendum glitch is just a bump in the road, or a trip into
the ditch for the democracy movement.
8 comments:
Dear Peter, I always read your blog with great interest. It sounds like you are saying something really interesting and important. Are you planning to break down your series of blog entries about HK Occupy movement for the uninitiated any time soon? I think I may appreciate that. Because I'm getting a little confused with all the names you mention. Sincerely!
The Blue Ribbon and anti-Occupy Central Hong Kong people have spoken- IIGNORE the voting by the Anti- Government people-the OC group. Hong Kong people have voted the past few days. THIS IS the majority of Hong Kong people who object to the demands of the rebel students, and support the HK Govt. and HK Police. Why aren't you reporting this important message that Hong Kong people like the Status Quo.
Hong Kong People have spoken. The Pan Democrats and student has now postponed or forfeited their own election. Hong Kong people and the Chinese are smarter than these so called pro-democrats.
Sorry the HK posts are pretty much inside baseball. You've got the pro-democracy or all-democracy coalition of legislators from the Civic, People's, Labour Party etc. in the Legislative Council; most of them are participating in the Alliance for True Democracy, an umbrella group of political parties supporting the Occupy movement; they reach out to the two main student groups, Hong Kong Federation of Students (Alex Chow) and Scholarism (Joshua Wong), the HK Confederation of Trade Unions (general secretary Lee Cheuk-yan), and some other civic organizations; in turn these groups all defer more or less (less, I think, in the case of the aborted referendum) to Occupy Hong Kong With Peace & Love (OHK), which is masterminded by Benny Tai, Chan Kin-man (university profs) & Reverend Chu Yiu-ming. The current OHK campaign is "Occupy Central", which is supported by all the pro-Dem groups. Symbols: umbrellas, yellow ribbons. Other guys = pro-Beijing blue ribbons
This protests have nothing to do with
democracy. It is NED, Soros, Jimmy Lai
, the Brits who conspire this Raid on the
HK economy by investing $billions on the
HK Futures Market, the HSI to fall in
October. The students and youths are
Being taken for a ride, the special group
Were promised legalized LGBT. Tai
and Chan and Joshua Wong were paid to
Recruit and train 1,000 youths to be
Organizers. These plots are all exposed in
HK media and some Euro media. Face Book
And You Tube posts exposed in details. Only
The US media keep mum. In two days, watch
The HSI decides the winner. It's all about
money! Everything else is a illusion!
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