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March 31, 2016

REDEFINING FAILURE -bySuzanne Pepper

Probably it’s time for Hong Kong’s democracy movement to take stock of where it is, how far it has come, and where it wants to go.   There’s much talk now about polarization … the great divide between the camps however defined: democratic, pro-Beijing, conservative establishment, and so on. But there are other questions … more interesting and urgent … that need to be settled first among democrats themselves.

This is because the questions seem to be constantly revolving around the concept of “failure” and democrats’ periodic descent into disarray at the prospect. The disarray leaves openings for adversaries to exploit, hastening the downward spiral toward apparent defeat … the perfect self-fulfilling prophecy.

But what if they thought they were winning instead of losing? A good case can be made in that respect and it might do wonders for morale as well as the coherence of a movement that often seems in danger of disintegration when it should be gathering strength for the bigger struggles to come.

The questions are first and foremost about government and politics and the challenge posed by Hong Kong’s democracy movement to Beijing’s one-party dictatorship. There are plenty of other concerns … economic, social, and cultural. These are regularly used by adversaries to distract public attention and they are being used now, by Beijing and the Hong Kong government, toward that end. It means prosperity before politics … or what was touted for a time as the “Beijing consensus.”   Such concerns are also sometimes used by democrats themselves in search of relief from the demoralizing aura of political defeat.  “One-trick-ponies” was the term used with some success in past years to mock democrats and divert them from their single-minded focus on political demands.

Yet the distractions come more easily because all who call themselves democrats have yet to define their goals and strategies, much less the standards for judging success and failure at each step along the way. A rethink has begun especially among the younger generation but the young ones also seem on course to repeat some of their elders’ debilitating mistakes. Consider three recent declarations of “failure” … one from the older generation, one from the younger, and another from everyone.

HAILING DEFEAT

Benny Tai’s first response to Beijing’s August 31, 2014 rejection of all Hong Kong’s many proposals for reforming the election of its Chief Executive was that he had “failed.”Occupy Central with Love and Peace was his brainchild. A law school professor at the University of Hong Kong, Benny Tai Yiu-ting 【戴耀廷】had worked tirelessly for two years propagating and organizing. His original idea was to have 10,000 people stage a sit-down on the streets of Hong Kong’s central business district if Beijing did not agree to a design for genuine universal suffrage that met international standards.

By the time Beijing’s final decision was announced on August 31, 2014, Tai’s supporters had rehearsed their routines many times over: occupy, no violence, no resistance when police moved in … which the police had made preparations to do. There was even a dress rehearsal after the July First protest march that year by both occupiers and police. They proved it could be done in a few days.

But when Beijing’s final decision came down on August 31, it not only did not meet any international standards but it ignored all the many proposals … conservative, moderate, and radical … that people had contributed in response to the Hong Kong government’s invitation to do so. Then, after an impromptu pep rally to keep spirits up, Tai did just the opposite.

Everyone was amazed by the scoop he gave to Bloomberg news reporters the next day. Evidently he had really thought he could force Beijing’s hand by threatening to block downtown traffic for a few days because he readily conceded defeat. He said he had “failed” in his objective of pressuring Beijing to allow genuine universal suffrage elections. He reluctantly proceeded with the plan but wanted business executives to know that it would be done in such a way as not to damage Hong Kong’s economy … preferably on a long holiday weekend (Bloomberg news, Sept. 2; everyone else Sept. 3). *

Had college and secondary school students not picked up the ball, Benny Tai’s project might have ended then and there. But the students carried it a step further. They had been thinking about a one-week classroom boycott to mobilize support for the Occupy event and decided to go ahead with their idea. Asked what they hoped to achieve, they said a mass movement was needed to create more bargaining power. We know we cannot change Beijing’s decision, said one student leader in response to skeptical questioners, but we want to awaken more people … to create a wider public audience for the cause.

They students did just that. Their strike was surprisingly successful, with the support of their schools and teachers as well. People did begin to pay more attention beyond the relatively small circles that had been participating in the electoral reform debates for over a year. When post-strike student enthusiasm led them to try and break into a closed-off area at the Legislative Council compound, the public spent the weekend of September 27-28 congregating at the spot where the break-in and consequent arrests had occurred.

The crowds grew on Sunday, September 28 … a spontaneous gathering without any organization or police permission … and it was the police tear gas barrage that, in effect, launched Benny Tai’s movement without him. The occupation that filled streets around the Legislative Council building where the crowds first gathered was far from the downtown central business district.  And instead of blocking a few streets there that are closed to traffic on holidays anyway, the movement closed down major transport arteries on both sides of the harbor and lasted for 79 days … symbolized by the umbrellas that demonstrators used to protect themselves during the first day’s tear bas barrage.

All things considered, the movement was a great success generating international headlines and “awakening” far more locals to the nature of mainland-style versus open universal suffrage elections than Benny Tai’s carefully rehearsed project could ever have done. But did anyone among the participants or observers use the word “success” with reference to the 79-day occupation? On the contrary, everyone regards it as a failure … defined only in terms of the narrow aim of Chief Executive election reform. Beijing remained unmoved and never gave an inch.

In answer to a New York Times reporter reviewing his just-published book on the subject, Jason Ng said Occupy had failed to gain any concessions from Beijing on political reform leaving many disillusioned and bitter. The community is more polarized than ever, he said, and localist sentiments are radicalizing the democracy movement (NYT, Mar. 24). **

And those localist sentiments also focus on failure. The latest player to make his mark in this respect is Edward Leung Tin-kei 【梁天琦】.  His new group Hong Kong Indigenous (orLocal Democratic Front, in Chinese … 本土民主前線) precipitated the Lunar New Year uprising in Mong Kok on the night of February 8-9. He subsequently won over 66,000 votes in a by-election necessitated by the resignation of democracy movement elder Ronny Tong Ka-wah 【湯家驊】.

Tong had hoped the election campaign would refocus Hong Kong’s political reform debate on the need for a moderate “third way” between Hong Kong democrats and Beijing. It did just the opposite (Mar. 2 post) … by-election  The strengthening pro-democracy trend he deplores as too radical is growing stronger not weaker. He must now acknowledge another failure, one of several he has suffered along the way.

Although Edward Leung is different from all others in that he advocates violent resistance, his reasons are just like those of everyone else. Try violence, he says, because everything else has failed to register any result (Feb. 25 post). … (what price localism?)   Like the Umbrella soldiers and Benny Tai’s more moderate Occupiers before them, he mocks the endless sequence of Sunday afternoon protest marches. Pan-democrats have kept the tradition alive for decades, but itt has accomplished nothing, he says. Afterward, the marchers go home, the powers-that-be do their best to ignore them, and the day’s exercise is soon forgotten.

Leung doesn’t explain exactly how he thinks violence can change things. But if Hong Kong’s past experiences with riotous behavior are any indication, he may have a point (Mar. 14 post). … (rationalizing violence)

A WAY OUT OF THE PREDICAMENT?

Actually, escaping from this dilemma could be done rather easily by adjusting the frame of reference and the time line. Beijing needs to be in the frame and the time line needs to be long-term not just one Hong Kong election cycle at a time. The adjustment would allow pan-democrats to recalibrate and conclude that they are actually winning not losing. But before accomplishing that feat, they would have to acknowledge what are perhaps their two greatest real failures.

The first concerns the assumption that promises Beijing made, to guide the 1997 transfer from British to Chinese rule, could be taken at face value using Western definitions. The Civic Party, in its new 10-year anniversary revised manifesto has begun making this adjustment. It says they still thought, when the party was founded in 2006, that Beijing’s promises meant what the words and Hong Kong’s Basic Law constitution said. Hong Kongers would be allowed the autonomous space to govern themselves in their own way under the “one-country, two-systems” formula. Now they know differently.*** Beijing’s original promises, in other words, need to be understood using Beijing’s definitions if they are to be effectively countered and resisted.

The second failure is the failure to calculate what their own sequence of self-proclaimed “failures” means to Beijing. Because Beijing, too, is failing here. If Beijing never meant for Hong Kong people to rule Hong Kong autonomously, according to Western democratic values, then everything that Beijing has tried to accomplish since 1997 in terms of cross-border political, economic, and social integration makes a lot of sense.

It follows that the Basic Law’s Article 5 was probably ihttp://chinaelectionsblog.net/hkfocus/?p=1582