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Hong Kong lawmakers ease up on delaying tactics as budget bill gets lukewarm response

Just 745 amendments have been filed ahead of the debate, compared with over 2,000 last year

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Financial Secretary Paul Chan delivers his budget in Legco in February. Photo: Dickson Lee
Pan-democratic lawmakers are planning the shortest filibuster on the government budget for five years when they start scrutinising the bill on April 26.
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But far from showing agreement with spending plans, it reflects their lukewarm response to the last financial blueprint of Leung Chun-ying’s outgoing administration.

A total of 745 amendments have been tabled to the Legislative Council, down on the 2,168 last year.

“Long Hair” Leung Kwok-hung remained the fiercest lawmaker, proposing about 500 amendments to focus on his call for a universal pension scheme, which the government has consistently ruled out.

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Raymond Chan Chi-chuen tabled 70 and called for the government to withdraw the much-criticised Territory-wide System Assessment for Primary 3 pupils.

Newly-elected lawmakers Nathan Law Kwun-chung and Eddie Chu Hoi-dick each submitted dozens of amendments. However, they dismissed suggestions they were filibustering, saying it was their way of carefully scrutinising the budget.

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