10.1Matters for the decision of the Legislative Council are set out in the Agenda of each Council meeting in the order prescribed in Rule 18(1) of the Rules of Procedure as explained in Chapter 7. [1] All decisions of the Council are made through the passage of motions. This Chapter explains the successive steps by which a proposal is brought before the Council upon a motion moved by a Member or a designated public officer and, through debate on the motion, how it is deliberated and put to the Council for a decision.
10.2In this Chapter, some background information on the various forms of motions is provided to facilitate understanding of their purposes and requirements under the Rules of Procedure. These various forms of motions include substantive motions and subsidiary motions (such as ancillary motions, dilatory motions, amendments, etc.). This Chapter also provides the historical background on the current procedures enabling issues concerning public interests to be raised for debate in the Council [2] through motion debates [3] or adjournment debates [4]. There is also detailed explanation of the arguments over the applicability of Article 74 of the Basic Law to motions and amendments to motions and bills, as well as the principles adopted by the Presidents of the pre-1997 and HKSAR Legislature in determining whether a proposed motion or amendment is beyond the competence of the Council or has a 'charging effect' on the revenues or public moneys of Hong Kong.
10.3A motion is a proposal submitted to the Council for its decision. It should be framed in such a way that the motion, once passed, will become a decision of the Council, which may not be discussed again in the same session unless by way of a motion to rescind that decision if permitted by the President.[5] Decisions of the Council vary in nature and consequences. They may be resolutions with the force of law which the Government must implement according to Article 64 of the Basic Law. Decisions may also be orders made by the Council for self-regulation, such as a motion to impose sanctions against a Member in accordance with the Rules of Procedure [6], or a motion to make a rule or a temporary order for the regulation of its proceedings. A decision may also be an expression of views with no binding effect on individual Members but in respect of which the passage of the motion will put pressure on the Government regarding a specific position or standpoint agreed by the Council.
10.4As a general rule, a motion for the decision of the Council is debatable. The objective is that through a process of deliberation the Council should have a better understanding of the pros and cons of the matter and therefore be in the best possible position to decide on it. Where a debate is not allowed, it should be so provided in the Rules of Procedure, e.g. no debate is allowed upon the first reading of a bill.[7] However, even where a motion is debatable, this does not mean that there are no limits to the debate. Rules on speaking time and the number of times a Member is permitted to speak on a motion are provided to ensure the smooth conduct of debate in the Council.
10.5A motion is usually amendable unless the motion itself is subsidiary to another motion and is not subject to amendment as a general rule.[8] This will be explained under "subsidiary motions" below. In the Rules of Procedure, there are some motions which are not subsidiary motions but nevertheless are not subject to amendment. They are those for which the wording has been prescribed or which are specifically for the implementation of certain provisions of the Basic Law. Examples are a motion for the disqualification of a Member from office [9], a motion for the reconsideration of a bill returned by the Chief Executive [10] and a motion to take note of a report of the House Committee on consideration of subsidiary legislation and other instruments [11].
10.6Almost all motions are to be voted on. There are however some exceptions which are set out in the Rules of Procedure. One example is an adjournment debate moved under Rule 16(4) of the Rules of Procedure where the motion has not been agreed to before the expiry of the time for the debate. Under Rule 16(7), the President will then adjourn the Council without putting any question.[12] Another example is the motion moved under Rule 49E of the Rules of Procedure to enable Members to speak on subsidiary legislation or other instruments tabled in the Council to which no amendment has been proposed. Rule 49E(9) provides that after Members and designated public officers have spoken on the motion, the debate comes to a close. The President shall not put any question to the Council for a vote and the Council will proceed to the next item of business on the Agenda. In both cases, the purpose of the motions is to facilitate a debate on a subject rather than a decision of the Council. Details on the procedures for holding these debates are provided in the latter part of this Chapter.
10.7In the legislatures of other common law jurisdictions, motions are commonly classified into substantive and subsidiary motions to reflect the different nature of motions and to devise appropriate procedures to cater for the purposes each aims to serve. There is no such classification in the Rules of Procedure of the HKSAR Legislature although the motions referred to under these two categories also exist in the Rules of Procedure. It is therefore relevant to examine how the various motions contained in the Rules of Procedure are treated in other parliamentary settings in order to understand how they are related to each other in the conduct of the business of the Council.
Substantive motions
10.8A substantive motion is a self-contained proposal framed in such a way as to be capable of expressing a decision of the Council. Examples are motions to amend subsidiary legislation or any legislative instrument as referred to in Rule 29(2) of the Rules of Procedure, motions to extend the scrutiny period of subsidiary legislation as referred to in Rule 29(3), motions to amend the Rules of Procedure, to appoint a select committee, to authorize a committee to exercise the power to summon witnesses and motions not intended to have legislative effect but moved to facilitate a debate on a public issue, as well as procedural motions. A substantive motion is subject to amendment unless otherwise provided in the Rules of Procedure.
Subsidiary motions
10.9As noted in paragraph 10.7, the term "subsidiary motion" does not appear in the Rules of Procedure of the HKSAR Legislature but it is widely used in the practice and rules of other legislatures which adopt the Westminster model. In the House of Commons of the UK, there are the following types of subsidiary motions [13]:
(a)ancillary motions such as a motion that a bill be now read a second time;
(b)dilatory motions to supersede questions, such as a motion for the adjournment of a debate;
(c)motions dependent on other motions, such as amendments.
10.10A similar classification has been adopted by the House of Commons in Canada. In Canada, there are also subsidiary or ancillary motions which are dependent on some other proceeding or motion, as well as privilege motions which have precedence over the original motion under debate. Amendments or superseding motions such as dilatory motions to adjourn debate or adjourn the House are privilege motions.[14]
10.11Applying the same principles, there are the following subsidiary motions in the HKSAR Legislature:
(a)Amendment to a substantive motion under Rule 29(2) and (3) of the Rules of Procedure[15] (notice required[16], debatable, amendable), amendment to other substantive motions (notice required [17], debatable, amendable except in the case of motions not intended to have legislative effect [18]), amendment to a bill under Rule 57 of the Rules of Procedure (notice required, debatable, not amendable);
(b)Ancillary motion which is dependent upon another motion, e.g. "that the bill be now read the second time" under Rule 54(3) of the Rules of Procedure (debatable, not amendable [19]), "that a clause [or schedule] stand part of the bill" under Rule 58(1) of the Rules of Procedure (debatable, not amendable), "that the bill be read the third time and do pass" under Rule 63(1) of the Rules of Procedure (debatable, not amendable); and
(c)Dilatory motion which interrupts and supersedes a question under debate, e.g. adjournment of debate or of proceedings of a committee of the whole Council under Rule 40 of the Rules of Procedure (debatable [20], not amendable [21]).
Subsidiary motions in relation to the processing of a bill
10.12When the proposal is not a single motion as in the case of a bill which contains clauses and schedules, a more sophisticated process is adopted to provide the opportunity for each and every motion within the main proposal to be proposed, debated and put to vote. A bill is a substantive proposal. Within this proposal, there are subsidiary motions to carry the bill through the three-reading process. The motions that the bill be read the second (third) time or that a clause stands part of the bill are ancillary motions which are dependent on the bill. These ancillary motions are not subject to amendment and no notice is required as they form part of the process in carrying the bill to a final decision.
10.13Amendments to the clauses and schedules are subsidiary motions which are subject to notice.[22] Each of these amendments is an independent motion although they are subsidiary to the bill.[23] When the Council becomes a committee of the whole Council after passage of the second reading of a bill, ancillary motions to enable individual clauses and schedules of the bill to stand part of the bill are proposed, debated and put to vote. A Member who has given notice to amend a clause or schedule should move the amendment motion at the time he is called to speak on the relevant ancillary motion after it is proposed. The amendment motions should first be dealt with before continuing with the original ancillary motion.
10.14Details on the three-reading process of a bill and how the ancillary motions and amendments are dealt with are provided in Chapter 11.
Motions for the adjournment of a debate or of proceedings of a committee of the whole Council
10.15A dilatory motion interrupts the proceedings and supersedes the original motion. It must be disposed of before the debate on the original motion can be resumed. The motions under Rule 40 of the Rules of Procedure to adjourn a debate in the Council or the proceedings of a committee of the whole Council are dilatory motions aiming to provide an opportunity for the Council or the committee to consider if the debate or proceedings should be adjourned until another meeting. No notice is required for dilatory motions. Any Member who has risen to speak on a question may move under Rule 40(1) without notice in the course of a debate in the Council that the debate be now adjourned, or may move under Rule 40(4) when the Council is in committee that further proceedings of the committee be now adjourned. The effect of the passage of these motions is that the debate or proceedings are interrupted by an adjournment but may be resumed on a future date. The motions moved under Rule 40 cannot be amended or moved with any condition or qualification.
10.16When a motion moved under Rule 40(1) of the Rules of Procedure has been agreed to, the Council shall proceed to the next item of business. The debate adjourned may be resumed at a subsequent meeting provided that notice is given to the Clerk to resume the debate not less than 5 clear days before the day on which the debate is to be resumed unless the President agrees to dispense with the notice.[24] A motion may again be moved to adjourn the debate which has been resumed.[25] If the motion has been negatived, the Council will continue to debate the original motion and no further motion to adjourn the debate may be moved except by a designated public officer.[26]
10.17When a motion moved under Rule 40(4) of the Rules of Procedure to adjourn proceedings of the committee of the whole Council has been agreed to, the Council shall resume and proceed to the next item of business on the Agenda. For the resumption of the adjourned proceedings, a notice of not less than 5 clear days is required to be given to the Clerk unless the Chairman agrees to dispense with the notice. A motion to adjourn the resumed proceedings may again be moved. There is no stipulation in the Rules of Procedure that a motion to adjourn proceedings in a committee of the whole Council may not be moved again if an earlier motion to adjourn the same proceedings has been negatived.
10.18On 9 May 2012, when the Council was in committee to consider the clauses of and schedules to the Legislative Council (Amendment) Bill 2012, Ms Audrey EU moved to adjourn the proceedings of the committee. In response to her remarks that this motion, if negatived, could not be moved for a second time, President Jasper TSANG clarified that as Rule 40 did not specify that such a motion could not be moved again in the same proceedings and Committee stage could be a lengthy process, he considered that different Members should be allowed to move a motion to adjourn proceedings at different times during Committee stage. Nevertheless, as President, he had the duty to consider whether the timing was reasonable.[27] The motion moved by Ms EU, after debate, was negatived. On 16 May 2012, both Mr Alan LEONG and Mr LEE Cheuk-yan sought to move another motion to adjourn the same proceedings. After listening to their explanations, the President did not consider that there was any new development in the previous week which would have made the debate on proposed motion different from the 5-hour debate held on the motion moved by Ms EU the week before. He did not allow Mr LEONG or Mr LEE to move their motions.[28]
10.19Regarding the speaking time on a motion moved under Rule 40(1) of the Rules of Procedure, the usual maximum time of 15 minutes applies. However, if the motion to adjourn a debate is in respect of a motion for which a specified time recommended by the House Committee applies, such as the regular motion debates at each Council meeting, Members speaking on the motion to adjourn must limit their speeches to the recommended specified time if it is accepted by the President.[29]
10.20Rule 29(1) of the Rules of Procedure provides that the notice period for the moving of a motion in the Council and in a committee of the whole Council should be not less than 12 clear days before the day on which the motion is to be considered. As a meeting of the Council or a committee of the whole Council may last for a few days, the date used for setting the deadline for giving notice is the first day of the Council meeting concerned. Since the First Legislative Council, the date of a Council meeting is identified as the Council meeting "of " instead of "on", such as "the Council meeting of 5 November 2014". The meeting may actually last for 2 or more days but the business transacted on these days is still regarded to have taken place on 5 November 2014. This is to obviate any confusion caused to Members and the public on the date of the Council meeting concerned.[30]
10.21Notwithstanding the notice requirement stipulated in Rule 29(1) of the Rules of Procedure, the Rule also provides the President with the discretion to dispense with such notice. Dispensation of notice is not usually given unless there is very strong reason put forward by the Member or designated public officer to justify why the 12 clear days' notice cannot be given. Presidents of the Legislative Council have attached great importance to the need for giving proper notice of a motion for the decision by the Council so that all Members will have the chance to consult their constituencies and political bodies on the merits and shortcomings of the motion before they decide whether or not to support it. The President may take into account the view of the House Committee if the matter has been brought to it for discussion, but the President's ruling is independent of the House Committee's view.
10.22The notice period for an amendment to a motion is not less than 5 clear days before the day on which the motion concerned is to be considered by the Council or committee of the whole Council unless the President or Chairman gives leave to dispense with the notice.[31] A chart showing the notice requirements for bills, motions and amendments for Council meetings is given in Appendix 10-A.
Motions to approve subsidiary legislation or other instruments in accordance with section 35 of Cap.1 or other Ordinance
10.23As explained in Chapter 7 [32], motions may be moved to propose or amend subsidiary legislation. Where a piece of subsidiary legislation is subject to the approval of the Legislative Council, a motion (or proposed resolution) is required to be moved to seek the Council's approval in accordance with the relevant ordinance. Proposed amendments may then be moved in accordance with section 35 of the Interpretation and General Clauses Ordinance (Cap. 1). The notice period for this type of motions (or proposed resolutions) is not less than 12 clear days before the day of the meeting at which the motion is to be considered by the Council. Notice of any amendment to the motion (or proposed resolution) should be given not later than 5 clear days before the meeting concerned unless the President gives leave to dispense with the notice.
Motions to amend subsidiary legislation or other instruments subject to section 34 of Cap.1 or other Ordinance
10.24If the making of the subsidiary legislation or other instrument is subject to intervention by the Legislative Council in accordance with section 34 of Cap. 1 or an ordinance, the subsidiary legislation or instrument made must be laid on the Table of the Council. Where an amendment to such subsidiary legislation or instrument is proposed, a motion (or proposed resolution) is required to be moved within the scrutiny period.[33] Notice of the motion (or proposed resolution) should be given not less than 5 clear days before the day on which it is to be considered by the Council unless the President gives leave to dispense with the notice.[34] Rule 29(4) provides that the notice period for any amendment to a motion to amend subsidiary legislation or instrument is decided by the President according to his discretion.
Motions to extend the scrutiny period for amendment in accordance with section 34 of Cap. 1 or other Ordinance
10.25Amendments to the subsidiary legislation made under section 34 of Cap. 1 should be made within 28 days after the subsidiary legislation has been laid on the Table of the Council. This 28-day scrutiny period for amendments may be extended by a motion moved for the purpose anytime during the scrutiny period. Notice of such a motion must be given not less than 3 clear days before the day on which the motion is to be considered by the Council unless the President gives leave to dispense with the notice.[35] Rule 29(4) provides that the notice period for any amendment to a motion to extend the scrutiny period is decided by the President according to his discretion.
Motions to take note of reports of the House Committee on consideration of subsidiary legislation and other instruments
10.26Part JB of the Rules of Procedure provides that a report of the House Committee on the consideration of subsidiary legislation and other instruments which have been laid on the Table of the Council may be presented at the Council meeting immediately before the expiry of the period for amendment.[36] A Member may notify the House Committee that a debate should be held on any subsidiary legislation or instrument in that report not later than the week preceding the Council meeting at which the report will be presented or, if no House Committee meeting is to be held in the week preceding the Council meeting, the Member may notify the Clerk to the House Committee not later than 6 clear days before the Council meeting. Upon the receipt of the notification, the Chairman of the House Committee gives notice not later than 2 clear days before that Council meeting to move a motion to take note of the report. The President has the discretion to dispense with such notice.[37] Details on the procedure in Part JB of the Rules of Procedure and the background on the need for such a motion are further elaborated in the latter part of this Chapter.[38]
Manner of giving notice
10.27The notice of a motion or amendment must be signed by at least one Member or such number of Members as required by the Basic Law or the Rules of Procedure.[39] Where more than one Member has signed the notice, one of these Members should be designated as the mover of the motion. The notice of a motion may be in Chinese or English, but a notice of an amendment to a motion which is in Chinese should be in Chinese, or in English if the motion is in English.[40] The notice should be submitted to the President with a copy delivered in writing to the office of the Clerk.
10.28Upon receipt of a notice of a motion or an amendment, the President may direct that it be printed in the terms in which it was handed in. He may also direct it to be printed with alterations which are editorial in nature. He may also direct that it be returned to the Member who signed it if it is in his opinion out of order.[41]
10.29If more than one Member has given notice of the same amendment, Rule 30(4) of the Rules of Procedure provides that the Member who gave the earliest notice which has not been withdrawn shall be the mover of the amendment. Prior to 2000, only the Member who gave the earliest notice had been allowed to move the amendment, which meant that if the Member withdrew the notice before it was moved, there was no opportunity for the Council to consider the amendment. Following a review conducted by the Committee on Rules of Procedure in 1999-2000, Rule 30(4) was amended to enable the Member who gives the earliest notice which has not been withdrawn to be the one to move the amendment. Rule 35 was also amended to ensure that instructions are given to the Clerk for the withdrawal of the relevant notice.
10.30The current practice is that all notices received by the Clerk for the same amendment are placed on the Agenda in the order in which the notices were received. The first Member on the list will be called upon to move the amendment. If he has withdrawn the notice or decides not to move the amendment, the Member next on the list will be called to move the amendment.[42] Once the Council has decided on the amendment, no other Member may move the same amendment within the same session under Rule 32 of the Rules of Procedure.[43]
Applicability of Article 74 of the Basic Law to motions
10.31As mentioned in Chapter 2 [44], the question over the applicability of Article 74 of the Basic Law to motions, or amendments to motions and bills considered by the Legislative Council was raised at the time when the Members-elect of the First Legislative Council had drafted its Rules of Procedure for endorsement by the Council at its first meeting on 2 July 1998. Members-elect were aware of the restrictions of Article 74 and agreed that further deliberations on its scope would be required. For the immediate functioning of the Council, it was agreed that for the purpose of reflecting the requirements under Article 74, the provisions in Rule 51(3) and (4) governing the presentation of bills would suffice. It was also agreed that the restrictions on motions, amendments to motions and bills with "charging effect", similar to those adopted in the pre-1997 Legislature, should be included in the Rules of Procedure to achieve a proper balance in the power to initiate legislative measures without contravening the Basic Law.
10.32On 30 June 1998, the Solicitor-General of the Department of Justice submitted his Department's view that Article 74 of the Basic Law should cover not only bills but also amendments to bills. In view of the different interpretation of the scope of Article 74, the Committee on Rules of Procedure of the First Legislative Council held a series of meetings in July 1998 to consider the matter. The Committee noted the Solicitor-General's view that Article 74 should be applicable to any amendments to bills including those proposed by the Government itself, but not to motions moved under section 34 and section 35 of Cap. 1. However, in the light of the Chief Executive's power and function under Article 48(10) of the Basic Law, the Solicitor-General's view was that the Chief Executive should be the person to decide whether a motion, including one not intended to have legislative effect, falls within the ambit of "regarding revenues or expenditure" as provided in Article 48(10) and whether a bill falls within the areas relating to public expenditure, political structure or the operation of the government or government policies under Article 74.
10.33After studying the expressions used in the Basic Law when referring to "bills", "motions" and "amendments to government bills", the Committee considered that the use of these expressions was very specific in the Basic Law. The Committee concluded that if Article 74 of the Basic Law were intended to cover amendments to government bills, there was no reason why it should not have been stated in the first place. Under the circumstances, it was inappropriate to extend the coverage of Article 74 to Members' amendments to government bills. Besides, the legislative process set out in the Rules of Procedure had allowed the Member (or public officer) in charge of a bill to withdraw the bill at the beginning of the third reading stage if he found it difficult to accept the bill in its amended form. The availability of this procedure had provided a means for the government to decide the final form of the proposed legislation introduced by it, and ensured a degree of checks and balances between the Executive and the Legislature, as well as preserving the principle of executive-led government.
10.34The Committee also noted that it was not specified in Article 74 of the Basic Law who should be the person to decide whether a motion or bill falls within the ambit of Article 48(10) or Article 74 respectively. However, if it was the intention of the drafters of the Basic Law for such decisions to be made by the Chief Executive, such an important requirement should have been expressly provided. The Committee considered that referral to the Chief Executive for ruling on each bill, motion and amendment would not only upset the proper checks and balances between the Executive and the Legislature, but would also seriously affect the day-to-day operation of the Legislative Council. Considering the powers of and inter-relationship among the Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary as provided in the Basic Law, the Committee was of the view that any person, including the Government, who is aggrieved by a decision of the President or perceive a breach of the law by the Legislative Council may seek judicial redress.
10.35The above views of the Committee on Rules of Procedure were set out in a report submitted to the House Committee for its meeting on 24 July 1998. See Appendix 10-B. The House Committee noted this report. Although the Government did not express any comment on the report, it did reiterate its reserved position whenever its view was sought on a Committee Stage amendment which it considered to be a matter within the scope of Article 74 of the Basic Law.[45]
Legal and constitutional considerations
10.36On occasions, the Government may submit to the President, when being invited to comment on a proposed motion, that the motion contravenes the Basic Law or the laws of Hong Kong. President Jasper TSANG, in a ruling made on 8 December 2008 [46], stated that the President determines the admissibility of a proposed motion in accordance with the Rules of Procedure only. President's rulings are procedural in nature. Legal and constitutional issues are only considered when they form an integral part of the procedural question under consideration.
10.37Motions to amend subsidiary legislation tabled in the Council must not exceed the power given to the authorities in making the subsidiary legislation. This is a principle laid down in section 34(2) of the Interpretation and General Clauses Ordinance (Cap. 1) which provides that the manner in which the Legislative Council may amend a piece of subsidiary legislation should be consistent with the power to make such subsidiary legislation. Where a question is raised on the admissibility of a motion to amend a piece of subsidiary legislation on grounds of ultra vires, it is the practice of the President to refer to the power given to the authorities which make the subsidiary legislation under the relevant provisions in Cap. 1 and the relevant ordinance, and consider whether the proposed motion has exceeded such power.
Employees Retraining Ordinance (Amendment of Schedule 3) (No. 2) Notice 2008
10.38One example which illustrates how the issue of ultra vires is dealt with is found in President Jasper TSANG's ruling on Mrs Regina IP's proposed resolution to amend the Employees Retraining Ordinance (Amendment of Schedule 3) (No. 2) Notice 2008. The Employees Retraining Ordinance (Cap. 423) provides for a levy payable by each employer employing an imported employee in a sum specified in Schedule 3 to the Ordinance. Under section 31(1) of the Ordinance, the Chief Executive in Council may, by notice in the Gazette, amend Schedule 3.
10.39On 11 November 2008, a Notice was gazetted to repeal an earlier Notice to reduce the levy from "$400" to "$0" for two years and replace it with a "$0" levy for five years from 1 August 2013. Mrs IP's proposed resolution sought to remove the five years' period so that the new levy of "$0" would remain effective from 1 August 2013 onwards without an end date. The Government argued that this would mean a dispensation of the levy altogether and this had exceeded the power which the Chief Executive in Council was exercising in making the Notice. The President noted that there was no expressed or implied restriction in the Ordinance on the length of period during which a specified amount of levy should apply to an amendment made to Schedule 3. Such length of period was essentially a question of policy and was within the power of the Chief Executive in Council to make. Hence, he did not find Mrs IP's proposed amendment inconsistent with the relevant provisions in law and allowed it to be moved at the Council meeting of 10 December 2008. [47]
10.40Another Member, Mr LEE Wing-tat, also proposed an amendment to the Government's amendment to Schedule 3 in the same Notice. Mr LEE proposed, on the basis of the earlier Notice, a reversion of the levy back to $400 with effect from a date to be appointed by the Secretary for Labour and Welfare subject to the approval of the Legislative Council. The Government considered this proposed amendment ultra vires as it would mean that the amendment to Schedule 3 would then be subject to section 35 of Cap. 1 instead of section 34 of Cap. 1 as stipulated in the Employees Retraining Ordinance. Such a change could only be achieved through amending the Ordinance itself. The President accepted this view and ruled Mr LEE's proposed amendment out of order.
10.41The President's ruling on the proposed resolutions to amend the Employees Retraining Ordinance (Amendment of Schedule 3) (No. 2) Notice 2008 proposed by Mrs Regina IP and Mr LEE Wing-tat is at Appendix 10-C.
Country Parks (Designation) (Consolidation) (Amendment) Order 2010
10.42Another important ruling made by the President over the scope of power of the Legislative Council to amend (which includes "repeal") subsidiary legislation tabled in the Council concerned the proposed resolution to repeal the Country Parks (Designation) (Consolidation) (Amendment) Order 2010 ("Amendment Order") proposed by Miss Tanya CHAN. The Amendment Order sought to replace the original approved map in respect of Clear Water Bay Country Park with a new approved map for the purpose of excising a 5-hectare encroachment area to form part of a proposed landfill extension in South East New Territories.
10.43On 25 May 2010, in accordance with section 14 of the Country Parks Ordinance (Cap. 208), the Executive Council advised and the Chief Executive ordered that the Amendment Order be made after a process of public consultation and consideration of objections to the draft map, as well as the depositing of the new approved map in the Land Registry. Miss Tanya CHAN gave notice to repeal the Amendment Order at the Council meeting of 13 October 2010. In response, the Government submitted to the President that it was unlawful for a Legislative Council Member to propose a resolution to repeal the Amendment Order as to do so would be inconsistent with the power to make the Amendment Order under section 14 of Cap. 208 which required the Chief Executive to implement the decision of the Chief Executive in Council. The fact that the Chief Executive "shall" make an order meant that nothing could lawfully be done to stop or amend the designation, including moving a motion to repeal the order.
10.44After seeking legal advice (including an opinion from outside Senior Counsel) and referring to a previous ruling made by his predecessor Mrs Rita FAN [48], President Jasper TSANG considered that the Legislative Council should have the constitutional duty to scrutinize subsidiary legislation and correspondingly the power to amend or repeal where appropriate to do so and that the statutory provisions in any ordinance which grants powers to make subsidiary legislation should not in the absence of clear words or manifest legislative intention be interpreted to mean that the Legislative Council has abdicated its control over the exercise of those powers. He did not find that the Chief Executive, in discharging his duty under section 14 of Cap. 208, had no power to determine when an order for the designation should be made and take effect, or to move in the Council to repeal an order he had made earlier if there were good reasons for him to do so. The President considered that neither section 14 of Cap. 208 nor Cap. 208 when read as a whole had expressed or manifested any contrary intention that the power of the Legislative Council to amend, and therefore repeal, subsidiary legislation under section 34 of Cap. 1 had been displaced. He therefore ruled that Miss Tanya CHAN's proposed resolution was in order. The President's ruling is at Appendix 10-D.
Charging effect
10.45Under Rule 31(1) of the Rules of Procedure, only the Chief Executive or a designated public officer may move a motion or an amendment which, in the opinion of the President, has the object or effect to dispose of or charge any part of the revenue or other public moneys of Hong Kong. A Member who wishes to move a motion with the same object or charging effect must obtain the Chief Executive's consent in writing which will be recorded in the record of proceedings. Rule 31(1) is a self-imposed restriction to uphold the principle that any proposal with charging effect should only be introduced on the initiative or with the authorization of the Government.[49]
10.46The concept of "charging effect" has developed from pre-1997 times when the Standing Orders required that any proposal which would impose a charge on public moneys of Hong Kong had to be put forward either by the Governor, or a designated public officer or a Member of the Legislative Council expressly authorized or permitted by the Governor to make such a proposal.[50] The concept was originally based on the constitutional principle of the 'financial initiative' of the Crown. That is to say, it was for the Crown to demand public monies for public expenditure, and for the legislature to grant.
10.47In a ruling made by the then President Andrew WONG on 5 December 1995 in respect of proposed amendments to the Immigration (Amendment) (No. 2) Bill 1995, he said that this principle was reflected in the then Standing Order No. 23 which required the President to "act fairly and reasonably, and to take into account all relevant considerations, then to reach his opinion having weighed all relevant considerations in an objective way". In his ruling (attached at Appendix 10-E), Mr WONG also highlighted "the important balancing duty" of the President to ensure serious consideration be given to the Crown's argument for it is his duty to act in accordance with the constitutional principle of the 'financial initiatives of the Crown' and to preserve Members' rights to propose any question for debate in the Council. There was a practice at that time to seek Government's views on a Members' motion (with legislative effect) or an amendment proposed by a Member to a government motion or bill before the President made his ruling. This practice has remained the same up to this date.
10.48Although the principle of the 'financial initiative of the Government' is not explicitly provided for in the Basic Law, the First Legislative Council made a conscious decision to preserve this principle in its Rules of Procedure by providing Rule 31(1) to govern motions and amendments to motions, and Rule 57(6) to govern amendments to bills. Nevertheless, how this principle is applied depends on the circumstances of each case. There are a number of guiding factors to which the President often refers when deciding whether there is charging effect in a proposed motion or amendment. These guiding factors include: whether the proposal will impose a new and distinct statutory function which is not provided for in the existing law; whether the proposal will require the spending of an amount of public money that is not nominal or negligible; and whether the proposal will have the effect of forgoing revenue which may be collected under statutory authority.
A new and distinct statutory function
10.49One common feature in proposed motions or amendments which may give rise to charging effect is the creation of a new and distinct statutory function. The most common argument put forward by Members who insist that their proposals do not have any charging effect is that the additional expenditure arising from their proposals is merely an "incidental consequence" of their proposals or that such proposals are simply putting in specific terms something which is already being done in existing law or in practice.
10.50In March 1999, Ms Cyd HO proposed an amendment to the District Council Bill to add a new category of function to enable District Councils to "receive and handle complaints from Hong Kong residents". Although the "meet the public scheme" was already a current activity and the proposed amendment was to formalize it and make it a function of the District Councils, President Mrs Rita FAN ruled that she needed to consider the difference in Government's obligations between an administrative scheme and a statutory function. The principle adopted by Presidents of the Hong Kong Legislature is that where a new function is imposed upon a body created by statute in terms which require that it must do a certain thing, the inevitable consequence is that there will be a charge on the public revenue if the doing of that act requires the spending of public money. The applicable test is whether the proposed statutory function is one already provided for under existing law. If not, and if the President considers that the performance of the new function will require the spending of public money, it may be held to have a charging effect. In Ms HO's case, Mrs FAN considered that the proposed amendment incurred a new statutory function for which the Government had the obligation to devote resources and therefore it required the authorization of the Chief Executive. President's ruling is attached at Appendix 10-F.
10.51In another case, three Members proposed amending the United Nations (Anti-Terrorism Measures) Bill in July 2002 by providing a statutory compensation scheme in the proposed legislation to enable persons to claim compensation from the Government for loss due to a "wrong" specification which was not done in good faith or was done negligently. Although the schemes proposed by the three Members were slightly different, President Mrs Rita FAN considered that all the proposed amendments sought to introduce a statutory compensation scheme which was different from the redress available under the common law. Government's liability under the common law to pay compensation would be increased through the operation of any of the three schemes and this would therefore constitute a charge on the revenue.[51]
Government's statutory duty to shoulder additional expenditure
10.52Whether the Government would have the statutory obligation to shoulder the additional expenditure is another guiding factor to determine whether there is any charging effect. President Mrs Rita FAN's ruling in July 1998 on Mr LEE Cheuk-yan's proposed amendment to the Government's resolution under the Pneumoconiosis (Compensation) Ordinance (Cap. 360) illustrates this point. Whilst Mr LEE's proposed amendment would have the legal effect of increasing the amount of compensation for bereavement and the payment of compensation was a statutory obligation imposed on the Pneumoconiosis Compensation Fund ("the Fund"), the President noted that there was no requirement in the Ordinance that the Government needed to provide money to the Fund, nor was there any statutory mechanism to peg the amounts of compensation to the level of levy payable by construction works contractors and quarry operators to finance the Fund. Since the Fund is a statutory find and not the revenue of the Government, any consequence on the Fund would not have any charging effect on general revenue. The President ruled Mr LEE's proposed amendment admissible. President's ruling is attached at Appendix 10-G.
10.53The same principle was also applied to Mr Albert HO's proposed amendments to the Securities (Amendment) Bill 1998. President Mrs Rita FAN ruled Mr HO's amendments admissible on grounds that the Unified Exchange Compensation Fund in question was not funded by general revenue and the Government had no statutory obligation to pay money into the Fund or inject money into the Securities and Futures Commission's reserves for financing the Fund if required.[52] In her response to the Government's appeal, Mrs FAN reiterated that it was clear in the Securities and Futures Commission Ordinance (Cap. 24) that the Compensation Fund was intended to be a self-financing fund. There was no guarantee that any claims from the Fund could be satisfied. The Commission had the discretion to decide how far the claims should be met.[53]
10.54In considering the extent of Government's statutory obligations, the President also takes into account the "remoteness" of the Government's liability to utilize revenues or other public moneys to meet the statutory obligations, and also whether the amount involved is so nominal or negligible that it can easily be absorbed within the existing budget of the Government, and so can be ignored for the purpose of the "charging effect" under Rule 31(1) or Rule 57(6) of the Rules of Procedure.[54] [55]
Loss of revenue on the part of the Government
10.55The ruling made by President Mrs Rita FAN on 23 July 1998 in respect of Mr LEUNG Yiu-chung's proposed amendment to the Holidays (Amendment) Bill 1998 also carries significance in determining whether loss of revenue is a "charge on revenue''. Mr LEUNG proposed to amend the Bill by making the Sino-Japanese War Victory Day an additional general holiday in Hong Kong. One of the arguments put forward by the Government was that the Government would incur a resultant loss of productivity or revenue earning capacity which would not be a minor charge on the revenue and therefore could not be ignored. To establish this claim, the President considered that she had to be satisfied that the revenue in question was authorized by law and the loss was due to the proposed amendment. As the Holidays Ordinance (Cap. 149) did not impose on the Government an obligation to pay its civil servants for working on a general holiday, nor was it legislation to enable the Government to collect revenue, the claim of the Government that loss of revenue would be incurred could not be established.[56]
10.56In a further ruling made on 19 November 2001, President Mrs Rita FAN recapitulated the advice of Counsel to the Legislature that as a matter of general principle, the "charging effect" restriction provided in Rule 31(1) and Rule 57(6) of the Rules of Procedure applies to revenue which may be collected under statutory authority. A proposal which will have the legal effect of reducing Government revenue would have a charging effect for reason that the clear prospect of reduction of revenue would amount to disposal of revenue in the context of Rule 31(1) and Rule 57(6).[57]
Expression of views on matters relating to the NPC, Central Government of the People's Republic of China or other jurisdictions
10.57From time to time, Members may wish to move a motion debate to express views on certain topical issues which relate to the NPC, the Central Government or any local authorities in Mainland China. In a ruling made by President Mrs Rita FAN in April 2004, certain principles have been established as to how far the Legislative Council in the HKSAR may debate a motion relating to the NPC and its Standing Committee ("NPCSC"). Mrs FAN referred to various provisions in the Basic Law, namely Articles 1, 5, 12, 17, 57, 73(1) and 73(6), to recapitulate the constitutional relationship between the NPC/NPCSC and the HKSAR Legislature and their relevant powers, as well as Members' freedom of speech and debate in the Council under the Legislative Council (Powers and Privileges) Ordinance (Cap. 382). In the President's opinion, it was her duty to act as guardian of the rights and privileges of Members including their freedom of speech, but such freedom was not without bounds. Depending on the specific terms of a proposed motion, it would not be entirely impossible for a motion relating to a state organ to be admitted for debate in the Council, provided that it met the requirements of the relevant instruments and rules. She considered it out of order for the Legislative Council to debate a motion involving accusatory expressions against the character of NPCSC or the acts of NPCSC according to law, which would be likely to degrade it in the public estimation.[58] In a separate ruling made in May 2004, President Mrs Rita FAN returned a proposed motion to a Member as out of order on the same grounds. However, in this ruling, she stated that it would not be out of order to seek to criticize the NPCSC's decision as having the effect of indicating that the NPCSC has ignored people's aspirations, as that would not amount to making an accusatory expression against the character of NPCSC or its acts undertaken according to law.[59]
10.58In a ruling made by President Mrs Rita FAN on 7 May 2007, she applied the same principles to a proposed motion involving the Central People's Government on the basis that there is a constitutional relationship between the Central People's Government and the HKSAR in the context of the Constitution of the People's Republic of China and the Basic Law. She considered it out of order for the Legislative Council to make accusatory expressions or expressions of condemnation against the Central People's Government or to demand it to act contrary to the Constitution of the People's Republic of China.[60] The same principle was adopted by President Jasper TSANG in ruling against a proposed amendment to a motion relating to a decision of the NPCSC on 31 August 2014.[61]
10.59As regards motions (not intended to have legislative effect) relating to matters that may concern places outside Hong Kong, there has not been any rulings disallowing the moving of such motions provided that they are in compliance with the Rules of Procedures. On occasions, where it is considered by the House Committee that the moving of a debate in the Council on a matter which involves foreign affairs may not be appropriate, it is usual practice that a letter expressing concern of Members, if there is a consensus, is sent to the relevant authorities by the President [62] [63] or the Chairman of the House Committee.[64] [65]
Appeals to the public for undertaking unlawful acts are out of order
10.60Although not stated in the Rules of Procedure, it is out of order for Members to make appeals to the public through the moving of a motion debate in the Council to undertake any acts which are unlawful. Examples are appeals to take part in public processions for which notices of no objection by the Police [66] have not been issued. In various rulings made on motions relating to appeals to take part in the 1 July March or other marches, President Mrs Rita FAN reiterated that the Legislative Council should not appeal to members of the public to take part in activities that do not comply with legal requirements. She returned the affected motions to Members and allowed the motions to be reworded.
10.61The same principle was upheld by President Jasper TSANG who, in his ruling on 17 June 2009, stated that he should not allow the Legislative Council to appeal to the public to participate in a forthcoming activity the holding of which was still subject to confirmation that it met the necessary legal requirements. In his ruling, he also pointed out that it was inappropriate for him to speculate either how the Police would deal with the issuance of a notice in respect of every activity, or to assume that the Police would certainly issue a notice of no objection for the relevant activity on the ground that it had been held for a number of years.[67]
Rule of anticipation
10.62As a general rule, a motion intended to have legislative effect must not be anticipated by a non-legislative motion on substantially the same subject matter. This is set out in Rule 31(2) of the Rules of Procedure and explained in Chapter 7.[68]
Form of amendment
10.63In making amendment to a motion, a Member may delete one or more words of the motion, insert one or more words in the motion or at the end of the motion, or both.[69] In the course of the proceedings on the motion, the President may allow a Member who has given notice to move an amendment to revise the wording of his proposed amendment in order to make it compatible with any earlier amendment(s) passed by the Council, by waiving the notice for making such amendments under Rule 29(6) of the Rules of Procedure.
10.64The procedure adopted by the Hong Kong Legislative Council to deal with a motion is similar to that adopted by other legislatures which follow the Westminster parliamentary model. The purpose is to provide Members with the opportunity for debate before coming to a decision. Under the normal rules for debating a motion, the process involves the moving of a motion, the proposing of a question which repeats the terms of the motion for debate by the Council, and the putting of the question to the Council for decision. In this process, amendments to the motion, if such are allowed under the rules, are dealt with during the debate on the original motion. As each amendment is an independent motion subordinate to the original motion, a separate debate may be held on each amendment when the mover of the amendment proposes it at the time he speaks on the original motion.
10.65Under Rule 29 of the Rules of Procedure, notices are required for all motions and amendments to motions; hence Members are informed in advance what amendments will be dealt with when debating a motion. Joint debates are often held [70] so that Members may speak on the motion and the amendments at the same time. The mover of the motion has the opportunity to speak again on the amendment(s) and to make his reply. If a joint debate is not ordered, each amendment will be debated and voted on individually in the course of the debate on the original motion until all amendments have been disposed of. When all Members who wish to speak on the original motion have spoken, the Council will vote on the original motion or the motion as amended.
10.66To facilitate a better understanding of the flow of debate, the successive steps illustrating how a motion and its amendments are proposed, debated and voted on are set out in the flow-charts at Appendix 10-H and Appendix 10-I, based on two scenarios:
(a)A debate on a motion which is not subject to amendment or to which no amendment is proposed (with 15-minute speaking time limit); and
(b)Separate debates on a motion with one or more amendments ( with 15-minute speaking time limit)
10.67Another example is provided in Appendix 10-J to illustrate the process of a debate on a motion not intended to have legislative effect. It has been the practice that for this type of motions, joint debates are held if amendments are to be proposed and the speaking time limits set out in Rule 17 of the House Rules based on the recommendation of the House Committee will apply.[71]
Historical background
Before 1968
10.68The first time an Unofficial Member of the pre-1997 Legislature was enabled to hold a debate in the Council was on 23 November 1966 when the then President, who was the Governor, permitted the holding of an adjournment debate which was not yet provided for in the then Standing Orders. The debate took place after the Colonial Secretary moved that the Council be adjourned. Mr P C WOO, an Unofficial Member who had obtained permission from the President to initiate this debate, spoke for about 10 minutes on the manner in which the Police Force carried out its duties, followed by another Member who spoke for a few minutes before the Attorney General was called to reply. At that time, this kind of adjournment debate was expected to last for half an hour to enable Members to "initiate a brief debate on some matter of general public interest or concern without the formality of a substantive motion and without the rigidity that is required in the asking and answering of questions." [72] During the two years from November 1966 to 9 October 1968 before provisions for adjournment debates were included in the Standing Orders [73], 17 adjournment debates were held with the permission of the President to enable Members to speak on matters of public interest.
1968 - 1991
10.69The new Standing Order No. 9 in the 1968 Standing Orders provided that a motion that the Council do now adjourn might be moved by an ex officio Member for debating a matter or matters between two items of business or for enabling an Unofficial Member, at the conclusion of all business, to raise any public matter for which the Government was responsible. Whilst the first type of adjournment debate noted above could only be moved by an ex officio Member, the second type was restricted to a total speaking time of 20 minutes for Unofficial Members. Throughout the two decades from 1971 onwards, there were around 2 to 6 adjournment debates held in each session and many were used to follow up on issues discussed by the UMELCO ad hoc groups or raised at meetings under the redress system. At the same time, Unofficial Members also used Members' motions to hold debates on Government's Green Papers and White Papers. In the 1977-1978 session alone, four such motion debates were held. These motion debates also provided an opportunity for Unofficial Members to express views on Government policies and actions in particular in relation to matters of wide public concern. The more significant examples are the two motions moved by Senior Member Mr R. H. LOBO in 1983-1984 over the future of Hong Kong[74] and a motion moved by Senior Member Miss Lydia DUNN in 1987-88 on the draft Basic Law of the HKSAR.[75]
10.70On the other hand, adjournment debates continued to play an important role in facilitating Members to speak on matters of public interest and general topical concern although they were more often used to debate Government's consultation documents starting from the mid-1980s.[76] As a result, more Members wished to speak at adjournment debates and the President needed to exercise his discretion to extend the time of adjournment debates on almost every occasion.[77] The total speaking time for adjournment debate was extended from ½ hour to 1 hour in July 1983.[78] Subsequently, there was a standing arrangement that an ad hoc group was normally formed to co-ordinate preparation for an adjournment debate or a motion debate, and if there was consensus among some Members on certain points, one of them would speak on those points and state that they were shared by certain other Members, so as to save time.[79]
1992 - 1997
10.71Starting from October 1992, the House Committee decided that no more than two debates (either two motion debates, two subjects for an adjournment debate or one motion debate and one adjournment debate on one subject) should be held at each regular Council sitting. An allocation system was also devised to facilitate each Member (who was no longer addressed as an Unofficial Member) to move either a motion debate or one adjournment debate within a session. For the motion debates allocated under this system, a shorter speaking time was adopted.[80]
July 1998 - present
10.72When the First Legislative Council made its Rules of Procedure and House Rules in July 1998, it adopted the same arrangements for holding adjournment debates (Rule 16 of its Rules of Procedure) as well as the practice of allowing not more than two debates initiated by Members at each regular Council meeting (Rule 13 of its House Rules). The same methods of allocation of debate slots to individual Members and chairmen of committees were also adopted in Rule 14 and Rule 14A of the House Rules respectively. In the early version of Rule 13 of the House Rules, the nature of the two debates was specified and they were similar to the requirement in the pre-1997 Legislature (see paragraph 10.71). In November 2012 [81], this requirement was changed to two motion debates since very few Members chose to use their allocated debate slots for the purpose of holding an adjournment debate while more were giving notice to move to adjourn the Council under Rule 16(4) of the Rules of Procedure without using the allocated slots, as explained below.
Adjournment debates under Rule 16 of the Rules of Procedure
Motions moved under Rule 16(2)
10.73Under Rule 16(2) of the Rules of Procedure, a Member or a designated public officer may move without notice that an adjournment debate on a specific issue of urgent public importance be held between two items of business at a Council meeting. Such a motion requires the permission of the President and it may only be moved if the President is satisfied that the specific issue concerned is both urgent and important. While notice is not required for the moving of an adjournment motion under Rule 16(2), it has been an established practice that Members who wish to move such a motion should, as far as possible, inform the President in writing and seek his approval before the Council meeting.
10.74In considering the urgency of an application for holding an adjournment debate under Rule 16(2) of the Rules of Procedure, the President gives regard to the following questions:
(a)If the debate is not carried out at the Council meeting specified by the Member making the application, whether there will be any irreversible consequences; and
(b)If the issue is not debated at that meeting, whether the Council will not debate the issue in the foreseeable future.
10.75There have been a few cases in which the President refused to grant permission to applications for moving a motion under Rule 16(2) of the Rules of Procedure after considering these questions. An example is an application made by Ms Cyd HO who proposed to move an adjournment debate at the Council meeting on 17 November 2010 on the concern over the resite policy for Choi Yuen Tsuen and non-indigenous inhabitants villages. President Jasper TSANG, in his reply to Ms HO, recognized that the subject matter had been of great concern to Members of the Council. However he also noted that the land resumption and demolition work in Choi Yuen Tsuen had commenced in phases since October in the previous year and the resiting had been in progress for quite some time and was in further progress. He believed that Members would still have opportunities to debate the issue in the future.[82] Another example is Dr Priscilla LEUNG's application for an adjournment debate at the Council meeting on 7 July 2010 over the threat to public health and hygiene posed by the successive occurrence of incidents of persons being bitten by rodents. President Jasper TSANG, in his reply, recognized that the issue was of public importance but it was not so urgent that it had to be debated at the meeting concerned, since even if it was not debated at that meeting, there would not be irreversible consequences and Members would not lose the opportunity to express views on that issue at Council meetings.[83]
10.76Rule 16(3) of the Rules of Procedure provides that if a motion moved under Rule 16(2) is agreed to, the Council shall stand adjourned. As this kind of motions is moved between two items of business, the motions were invariably negatived in the past so that the Council may continue to deal with the remaining items on the Agenda.
Motions moved under Rule 16(4)
10.77Adjournment debates moved under Rule 16(4) of the Rules of Procedure are held at the conclusion of all business on the Agenda of the Council. Notice is required for this type of adjournment debates. Rule 16(5) provides that a Member who wishes to move such a motion should give notice of the issue in writing to the Clerk not less than 7 clear days before the date of the Council meeting concerned unless the President in his discretion dispenses with such notice.
10.78The President's discretion under Rule 16(5) relates to whether the 7 clear days' notice should be waived. Even if the issue raised in the motion is generally recognized as a matter of wide public concern, the President may not dispense with the notice requirement if he is not satisfied that the debate ought to be held at the particular Council meeting. He asks the same questions for determining the urgency of applications for adjournment debates under Rule 16(2), i.e. whether there will be irreversible consequences and whether the Council will still have the opportunity to debate the issue concerned in the future. He also gives regard to the reasons put forward by the applicant for not being able to give the required notice and whether it would be fair to other Members and the designated public officer concerned as they need to prepare for the debate. The same principles are adopted when the President considers requests to waive notice for motions. [84] The following example illustrates this point.
10.79On 9 March 2011, Mr James TO applied to President Jasper TSANG for moving an adjournment debate under Rule 16(2) of the Rules of Procedure at the Council meeting that day in order to debate the refusal of Philippine government officials and the rescue crew involved in the Manila hostage incident [85] to come to Hong Kong to testify in the Coroner's Court. The President recognized that the Manila hostage incident was a matter of great concern to Hong Kong people, but as the application was based on the speculation that the Coroner's Court would close the case if witnesses from overseas refused to testify in Hong Kong, the President considered that there were no sufficient grounds for him to establish the urgency of the issue and allow the debate under Rule 16(2) to be held.[86]
10.80On 16 March 2011, Mr TO submitted two applications to the President on the same issue for debate in the Council on that day: one under Rule 16(2) and the other under Rule 16(4). In his reply, the President said that although the Coroner's Court had entered into the 22nd day of the inquest which was originally scheduled for 25 days, there was no provision in law which required that the inquest ought to be completed within this timeframe and the Coroner's Court had the power to take other appropriate actions to discharge its statutory functions. The President concluded that Mr TO's request could not meet the requirement under Rule 16(2) of the Rules of Procedure. However, in considering Mr TO's application for the dispensation of notice for holding an adjournment debate under Rule 16(4), he noted that Mr TO needed to closely monitor the development of the situation and could not submit the application until he was certain that the overseas witnesses would not come to Hong Kong. The President accepted the grounds he put forward and noted that Mr TO had made known to all Members and the relevant public officers of his intention to move an adjournment debate as early as 9 March 2011, which was close to the requirement of 7 clear days' notice for moving a motion under Rule 16(4). He then agreed to dispense with the notice for the motion and allowed a debate on it to be held on 16 March 2011.[87]
10.81As there is an understanding among Members that only two motion debates not intended to have legislative effect may be moved by Members at each regular Council meeting, a Member who wishes to move an adjournment motion under Rule 16(4) of the Rules of Procedure still needs to seek the support of the House Committee even if he is able to give the 7 clear days' notice for the motion. In considering whether support should be given to a Member for raising an issue for debate under Rule 16(4), the House Committee will have regard to whether the issue should have been or could be raised by the Member in a motion debate under the allocation system, and whether it is of such an urgent, important and topical nature[88] that a reply from a designated public officer is necessary at the specified Council meeting.[89] Once agreed, the subject matter and scope of debate specified at the time of application must not be changed.[90]
10.82On the basis of the House Committee's recommendation and the notice received from the Member, the President will consider the inclusion of the Member's motion for the adjournment of the Council in the Agenda of the Council. Where two or more Members indicate their intention to raise issues for debate at the same Council meeting and they all have the support of the House Committee, the motion to adjourn the Council will be moved by the Chairman of the House Committee with separate debates to be held on each issue. The sequence of the issues in the motion is based on the dates (and time) on which the relevant applications to the House Committee were received. The Member who raises the issue is the first Member called by the President to speak on it during the respective debate.
10.83For adjournment motions moved under Rule 16(4) of the Rules of Procedure, the duration of the debate has been extended to last up to 1½ hours or such longer period as the President may determine for any meeting. [91] Speaking time for Members is up to 75 minutes or such longer period as determined by the President. At the expiry of the speaking time for Members, if the designated public officer has not yet been called to make his reply, the President will then call upon him. If after 1½ hours or such period as extended by the President the motion has still not been agreed to, the President shall adjourn the Council without putting any question.[92]
Replies by designated public officers
10.84There have been questions on whether a reply from a designated public officer is required in the case of an adjournment debate moved under Rule 16(2) of the Rules of Procedure. Rule 16(2) was adopted from Standing Order No. 9(2) of the pre-1997 Legislature.[93] In the early version of this Standing Order, only an ex officio Member could move a motion that the Council do now adjourn for the purpose of holding a debate on a matter or matters between two items of business. In November 1971, this Standing Order was amended to require that the issue raised for debate between two items of business by an ex officio Member, without notice, should be an issue of urgent public importance. As the ex officio Member was the one to move the motion, he was also the one to give the reply at the end of the debate. The situation had remained basically unchanged until 1994.
10.85In 1994, Standing Order No. 9 was amended to provide that a Member other than an ex officio Member could also move a motion under Standing Order No. 9(2) with the permission of the President. From then onwards, any Member or designated public officer may seek to move adjournment debates under Standing Order No. 9(2). As the debates are held on issues of urgent public importance, there had not been any arguments over the attendance of the relevant public officers at the debates for the purpose of responding to Members' speeches. This in fact has been the practice up to this date. The question of the attendance of designated public officer does not arise in the case of adjournment debates under Rule 16(4) of the Rules of Procedure as the purpose of the debate is to elicit a reply from a designated public officer.
Motion debates (not intended to have legislative effect)
10.86Motion debates not intended to have legislative effect generally refer to the motion debates set out in Rule 13 of the House Rules. Although reference is made in the Rules of Procedure to these motion debates as regards speaking time, no specific procedure is considered to be necessary for this type of debates. In other words, all rules governing motions also apply to these motions the purpose of which is to enable Members to hold a debate on a public matter with specific terms. Rule 13(b) of the House Rules has differentiated this type of motion from other motions which, if passed, will empower the Council, a committee, the President or other person(s) to do a certain act or invoke certain provisions under the laws or the Rules of Procedure.
10.87Rule 13(a) of the House Rules provides that not more than two motion debates initiated by Members should be held at each regular Council meeting.[94] However, the President may allow the holding of more than two such motion debates, or an adjournment debate pursuant to Rule 16(4) of the Rules of Procedure in addition to not less than two such motion debates, under special circumstances upon the recommendation of the House Committee. Generally speaking, the additional motion debates supported by the House Committee are those initiated by Panels for the purpose of expressing views on a Government consultation paper, which should be no more than one at each meeting, or by other committees at the conclusion of their specific tasks such as the conduct of an enquiry.
Allocation of debate slots to individual Members
10.88The method of allocation of debate slots to individual Members is set out in Rule 14 of the House Rules. Each Member may be allocated no less than 3 slots in a term. At the start of each session, a circular is issued by the Secretariat to notify Members of the dates of Council meetings at which time slots are available for holding debates. Members are requested to apply for a debate slot with the subject and the wording of the motion not later than 14 clear days before the Council meeting concerned although the deadline for giving notice of the motion is 12 clear days before the Council meeting. A sample of the application form is at Appendix 10-K. Applications received after the cut-off date will not be accepted. If the subjects of two or more proposed motions submitted by Members are substantially the same, the Member who first secures a debate slot has priority to move that subject for debate.
10.89In allocating debate slots to individual Members, the Secretariat prioritizes the applications according to the number of debate slots each Member has been allocated in the term and the number of unsuccessful bids in previous applications. Once a Member has been allocated one debate slot, all his previous unsuccessful applications will be disregarded. He will have a lower priority when compared to a Member who has not been allocated any debate slot. The order of priority is set out in Rule 14(d) of the House Rules. If the number of Members who are of equal priority for allocation exceeds the number of slot(s) available for allocation, a ballot will be conducted by the Chairman of the House Committee for determining who should be allocated the slot(s) for that Council meeting. The drawing of lots is usually conducted one day before the deadline for the giving of notice of motions for that Council meeting.
10.90There is also a standing arrangement under Rule 14(e) to (i) of the House Rules to facilitate Members who have been unsuccessful in obtaining a debate slot for a particular meeting to use the debate slot allocated to another Member provided that the request for transfer is made and agreed to by that other Member not later than 12 clear days before that meeting and that the Member who makes the request has not been allocated 4 or more debate slots in the term. There should be no further transfer of that slot. Although the Member who has transferred his debate slot to another Member will not be regarded to have been allocated a debate slot after the transfer, all the unsuccessful applications that were taken into account when his application was considered will be disregarded in his next application. The Member to whom a debate slot has been transferred is regarded to have been allocated a debate slot. A priority debate slot given to a Member under Rule 14(i) of the House Rules, as explained below, is not subject to transfer.[95] [96]
10.91Under Rule 14(i) of the House Rules, the House Committee may agree to give priority to a Member in respect of the allocation of debate slots for debates on urgent, important and topical issues. Where the request is made to the House Committee before the deadline for application for slots for that particular Council meeting, the House Committee may allocate one of the two debate slots to the Member and only one other debate slot will be subject to allocation. If the request is made after the debate slots for the particular Council meeting have been allocated and if it is considered that the debate ought to be held at that meeting, the House Committee may suggest to the two Members who are successful in the allocation if either one of them may be prepared to defer his debate.[97] If neither is prepared to defer his debate, the House Committee may recommend to the President that a third motion debate should be held at that Council meeting.[98]
10.92The mover of a motion may withdraw his notice of the motion at any time before it is moved. He will be regarded as having used his debate slot as no other Member will be able to move a motion for debate at the same Council meeting. However, if there is agreement of the House Committee for the withdrawal of his motion or if it is the House Committee which suggests that his debate be deferred, he may move the withdrawn or deferred motion at the first available slot at a subsequent Council meeting provided that the number of debates at that Council meeting should not exceed two. If the mover of the motion withdraws during the Council meeting, his debate slot will be regarded as having been used.[99]
10.93Any committee may move a motion for debate on a specific matter in the Council. The specific role of Panels, however, is reflected in Rule 14A of the House Rules which provides that if the motion is on a consultation document published by the Government and will be debated before the expiry of the consultation period, a slot will automatically be allocated to the chairman of the relevant Panel in accordance with the Panel's decision.[100] The motion should be neutrally worded without stating any stance and no amendment to the motion will be proposed. A request from a Panel for moving such a motion should reach the Secretariat together with the wording of the motion before the cut-off date for applications for debate slots, i.e. 14 clear days before the Council meeting. Except with the agreement of the House Committee, each Panel will not be allocated more than one such slot in a session. The slot so allocated will not be regarded as a slot allocated to an individual Member.
10.94In the event that there is more than one application from Panels for debate at the same Council meeting, priority is given to the debate on the consultation document with the earliest deadline for concluding the consultation. Where the deadlines are the same, allocation will be determined by balloting. The Panel(s) which is not successful in obtaining a debate slot at the desired Council meeting may be allocated one at the next or any subsequent Council meeting(s), depending on the number of Panels making the applications and the order of priority as determined by the ballot.
10.95If the request for a debate slot by a Panel or any committee or subcommittee is for a purpose other than a debate on a Government consultative document or for the Chairman of the House Committee to move such a motion, the automatic allocation of slots will not apply. It has been a practice in recent years for committees which have been appointed by the Council to carry out a task, such as an inquiry or an investigation, to table their reports in the Council. Where it is considered by the committee that a debate to take note of the report should be held, the request for the priority allocation of a debate slot for the motion should be put forward to the House Committee for consideration as soon as practicable.[101] All such requests are considered on a case-by-case basis, and should the House Committee accede to such a request, the debate slot will not be counted as the mover's own slot.[102] Otherwise, the Member who intends to move the motion on behalf of the Panel or committee/subcommittee concerned will have to apply for a debate slot under the normal allocation arrangement. This type of debates is held before the regular motion debates not intended to have legislative effect, and the normal 15-minute speaking time will apply unless recommended otherwise by the House Committee in accordance with Rule 37 of the Rules of Procedure.
10.96There was a long history in the pre-1997 Hong Kong Legislative Council and the post-1997 HKSAR Legislature seeking a procedure to enable Members to speak on subsidiary legislation or instruments tabled in the Council to which no amendment is to be proposed. Prior to July 1986, Members could only speak on a motion to amend subsidiary legislation under the scrutiny of the Council or, subject to the allocation of a debate slot, move a motion or adjournment debate on subsidiary legislation to which no amendment would be proposed. In July 1986, following a study of these arrangements by an ad hoc group set up to study an item of subsidiary legislation, a recommendation was made to allow Members to address the Council on subsidiary legislation. On 9 July 1986, the Council added Standing Order No. 14(4), under Presentation of Papers, to provide that Members could address the Council at any sitting during the scrutiny period. It was considered appropriate to do so as Members could "draw attention to the implications of such subsidiary legislation; or to explain the necessary balance struck between protecting the sectoral interest and public interest". [103] However, even with this new procedure, there were still complaints among Members over the difficulty to speak on subsidiary legislation as their addresses could not give rise to debate. Further amendments to Standing Order No. 14 were made in the 1990s to allow short questions to be put for elucidation but this still did not meet Members' need for timely speaking on some items of subsidiary legislation.
10.97In the 2008-2009 session, the subject was reviewed by the Committee on Rules of Procedure of the Fourth Legislative Council. It was considered by the Committee that there should be a procedure in the Rules of Procedure for holding debates on subsidiary legislation or other instruments tabled in the Council to which no amendment has been proposed. On 2 December 2009, the Council approved the inclusion of a new Part JB in the Rules of Procedure. Under the new arrangement, there is a report of the House Committee on its consideration of the items of subsidiary legislation and instruments tabled at each Council meeting. The report, which is prepared by the Chairman of the House Committee, will summarize the outcome of the scrutiny of all the subsidiary legislation and instruments including those to which no amendment has been proposed. This report is then presented at the Council meeting immediately before the expiry of the scrutiny period and is issued to Members approximately one week before the Council meeting. Any Member who wishes to raise any of the items of subsidiary legislation (for which no notice of amendment has been received) for debate should notify the Clerk to the House Committee. Where a meeting of the House Committee will be held before the Council meeting, the notification of the debate will be placed on the agenda of the House Committee meeting. Where there is no such meeting of the House Committee, the notification will be referred to the Chairman of the House Committee.[104]
10.98Upon the receipt of the notification that a debate on an item of subsidiary legislation or instrument should be held, the Chairman of the House Committee will give notice of a motion in the Council to take note of the relevant report.[105] If the Chairman of the House Committee will not be present at the Council meeting to move the motion, the Deputy Chairman of the House Committee or, if he also will not be present, the Member who will be present and has the highest precedence [106] will give notice and move the motion. The wording of the motion is prescribed in Rule 49E(4) of the Rules of Procedure. No amendment may be moved to the motion. If the motion relates to more than one item of subsidiary legislation or instrument, the debate on that motion may be divided into sessions with each relating to one or more items. A Member may speak once in each of the sessions for not more than 15 minutes. After Members and designated public officers have spoken on the motion, the debate comes to a close with no question put to a vote.[107]
10.99There are some other motions provided in the Rules of Procedure relating to the control of the proceedings of the Council. While these are substantive motions, they are procedural in nature and are given well defined terms in the Rules of Procedure to set out the scope of the motions. They are subject to debate but not amendable. These motions include:
(a)a motion under Rule 49(4) of the Rules of Procedure to shorten the duration of division bell to one minute (without notice);
(b)a motion under Rule 49B(2A) of the Rules of Procedure to enable the Council to order that a motion moved under Rule 49B(1A) for the disqualification of a Member from office under Article 79(7) of the Basic Law not be referred to an investigation committee (without notice);
(c)a motion under Rule 54(4) of the Rules of Procedure to enable a bill not to be adjourned and referred to the House Committee after the Member in charge of the bill has spoken at the start of the second reading debate on the bill (without notice);
(d)a motion under Rule 66(4) of the Rules of Procedure to enable the Council to order that a bill returned to the Council for reconsideration shall not be referred to the House Committee and that the bill shall be deemed to have been ordered for immediate reconsideration under Rule 66(5) of the Rules of Procedure (without notice); and
(e)a motion under Rule 91 of the Rules of Procedure to suspend a Rule (with notice or with consent of the President).
10.100There is also a motion under Rule 32(1) of the Rules of Procedure to rescind a decision of the Council. This motion is a substantive motion which requires the permission of the President and is subject to debate.
10.101The order of debates on motions is guided by Rule 18 of the Rules of Procedure with priority given to Government motions. The order of those initiated by Members is set out in Rule 15 of the House Rules. In principle, the Non-Government motions which are intended to have legislative effect will be placed on the Agenda of the Council before those not intended to have legislative effect. In the latter category, those which are initiated by a committee will take place before those initiated by individual Members. For those initiated by individual Members, the order is determined by the drawing of lots unless otherwise agreed among those concerned.