7th Legislative Council of Hong Kong
| 7th Legislative Council of Hong Kong | |||||
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| Overview | |||||
| Legislative body | Legislative Council | ||||
| Jurisdiction | Hong Kong | ||||
| Meeting place | Legislative Council Complex | ||||
| Term | 1 January 2022 – | ||||
| Election | 2021 election | ||||
| Government | Lam Administration (until 30 June 2022) Lee Administration (Since 1 July 2022) | ||||
| Members | 90 members | ||||
| President | Andrew Leung (BPA) | ||||
| Party control | Pro-Beijing camp | ||||
| Sessions | |||||
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The Seventh Legislative Council of Hong Kong is the current meeting of the legislative branch of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government. Its term of office began on 1 January 2022 and convened on 12 January 2022, in the last six months of Carrie Lam's tenure as Chief Executive and the first three-and-a-half years of John Lee's term of office. The legislature's term of office is expected to end on 31 December 2025.
The December 2021 election decided control of the legislature. Originally scheduled for 6 September 2020, Chief Executive Carrie Lam postponed the election for a whole year on 31 July 2020. On 11 March 2021, the National People's Congress (NPC) passed a decision to drastically overhaul the Hong Kong electoral system, which was followed by the Carrie Lam administration promulgated the Improving Electoral System (Consolidated Amendments) Ordinance 2021, which changed the general election of the seventh term of the Legislative Council from 5 September to 19 December 2021. Under the Ordinance, the membership of the Legislative Council increased from 70 to 90, and the members were elected by the Election Committee with 40 seats, functional constituencies with 30 seats, and geographical constituencies with 20 seats respectively.
Under the new election rules, the pro-Beijing camp won its largest majority ever, taking 89 out of the 90 seats in the chamber. The pan-democratic and localist camps were left with no representation in the legislature for the first time since the Handover, with most of their supporters boycotting the election. The 2021 election registered the lowest turnout ever since the introduction of elections to the Legislative Council in 1985, with only 32.22% of registered voters turning out to vote in the functional and geographical constituencies.