City Beat | Making everyone deal with a Hong Kong leader under US sanctions may well be part of Beijing’s game plan in picking John Lee
- The takeaway here is that the change of Hong Kong’s leadership cannot be subject to direct or indirect factors concerning the US
- Beijing may have also laid down a test for those who have to deal with Lee
Lee accused the US of “bullying” with its “blatant inference” in Hong Kong affairs, but brushed off any impact on his campaign. He is right in this regard – nothing will change the reality that he has Beijing’s blessing to take over as the city’s next chief executive.
However, the episode has revealed an unspoken, inconvenient truth to foreign governments and international investors with strong Hong Kong connections – not necessarily all about legal risks, but practicality.
Ever since the return of Hong Kong’s sovereignty to China in 1997, all the city’s previous leaders, starting with Tung Chee-hwa, made it a must to visit the US, besides touring European, Asian and other countries. That was until incumbent Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor was put on a sanctions list along with Lee and other officials two years ago by Washington, while international travel was also disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic.