Post Magazine

Incoming Hong Kong leader John Lee finalises cabinet line-up, submits list to Beijing for consideration

Hong Kong's incoming leader John Lee Ka-chiu has finalised the line-up of his cabinet and submitted it to Beijing for consideration, and has pledged to announce the list once it receives the green light.

Declining to give any names, Lee on Friday said he had brought in incumbent ministers, civil servants, professionals from the private sector and people familiar with district work.

"When forming this team, the central government demanded I build a team with aligned administrative vision, strong executive ability and unity," Lee, who will be sworn in as chief executive on July 1, told the media.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

"I also agree with this idea. I hope we can present a new landscape to all of you when I announce the line-up."

Lee said they were experienced and knowledgeable in their field, shared his principle of being "result-oriented" and valued team spirit.

The 64-year-old former chief secretary also expressed his gratitude to all officials in the current administration for their contributions to the city.

"We have worked together for almost five years. We encountered different challenges and obstacles. We sat in the same boat, built a good relationship and respect each other," he said.

But he declined to comment on whether civil service chief Patrick Nip Tak-kuen, a trusted aide of outgoing leader Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, would be in his team.

In an unexpected twist, multiple sources had earlier suggested Nip, who had expressed an interest in continuing to serve in any capacity, was not nominated by Lee.

Lee said he hoped the outgoing officials would continue to contribute to society by taking part in other roles, such as on different committees, government-run organisations and NGOs.

The Post has learned that only six of the 21 principal officials tipped to be recruited by Lee were not in the current administration. Two are from Beijing-friendly political parties and four are veterans of the legal, health, commerce and innovation and technology sectors.

They include Algernon Yau Ying-wah, chief executive of the fledgling Greater Bay Airlines, who is set to become commerce and economic development minister, and lawmaker Sun Dong, chair professor of biomedical engineering at City University, who is slated to head the revamped Innovation, Technology and Industry Bureau, according to sources.

Meanwhile, asked whether he was worried he would lose residents' confidence and his credibility after failing to comply with election rules during his leadership campaign, Lee said it was inappropriate for him to comment in view of ongoing legal proceedings.

But he said: "There was something that could have been done better during the election campaign. I understand that and I have explained it to residents many times. We should always aim to do better if we can."

Lee ran advertisements with three public figures' endorsements on his Facebook campaign page in April, but he failed to publicise electronic copies of the trio's written consent of support within one working day after the ads' publication.

He applied to the court last week for legal exemptions.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2022. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from Post Magazine

Post Magazine3 min readWorld
EU Chief Ursula Von Der Leyen Invited To Xi Jinping-Emmanuel Macron Summit In Paris Next Week
French President Emmanuel Macron has invited Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission chief, to a trilateral meeting with visiting Chinese leader Xi Jinping next week. Brussels-based von der Leyen is considered one of Europe's most hawkish leade
Post Magazine4 min readWorld
US Overtakes Mainland China As Taiwan's Main Export Market, Sign Of 'Strategic Shift' Amid Tech Decoupling
The United States has surpassed mainland China as world hi-tech hub Taiwan's top export destination this year in a sign that supply chain decoupling has made a palpable shift toward Western-allied markets. Taiwan's US$26.625 billion worth of exports
Post Magazine3 min readInternational Relations
US Strategy For Indo-Pacific Region Must Promote Economic Development, Not Just Defence: Senate Panel
Washington's strategy for the Indo-Pacific region is heavily focused on defence and lacks a robust economic agenda promoting regional development, an influential US Senate panel heard on Wednesday. The US should present "alternatives to what our comp

Related Books & Audiobooks