China's civilisational challenge

China's civilisational challenge

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam walks to cast her vote at a polling station during district council elections in November. (Photo: Reuters)
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam walks to cast her vote at a polling station during district council elections in November. (Photo: Reuters)

China's "one country, two systems" formula in Hong Kong is failing miserably. After months of large-scale pro-democracy protests – including violent clashes with police -- the city's voters dealt a powerful blow in November to pro-mainland parties, which lost 87% of the seats to pro-democracy rivals in district council elections.

The significance of that election should not be underestimated. While district councils have little power, they select some of the 1,200 electors who choose Hong Kong's chief executive. In the next such election, pro-democracy parties will fill nearly 10% of those seats.

The election also had important symbolic implications. District councils are elected in a fully democratic process, compared to only half the seats in the Legislative Council. With an impressive 71% turnout, the election was widely seen as a vote of no confidence in the embattled China-backed chief executive, Carrie Lam.

Some of Hong Kong's people have lost faith in the prospect of maintaining their democracy within the "one country, two systems" scheme. This is reflected in growing demands for independence, which were never heard during 155 years of British rule. While independence remains a fringe idea -- owing partly to recognition of China's uncompromising stand -- almost no one under the age of 30 in Hong Kong identifies exclusively as Chinese.

A similar backlash is also occurring in Taiwan. Having enjoyed de facto independence since 1949, Taiwan was supposed to be drawn back into the Chinese fold by the "one country, two systems" model. But that model's failure in Hong Kong has hardened anti-China sentiment, and turned many voters away from the Kuomintang-led "pan-Blue" parties, which favour closer ties with the mainland.

Indeed, after Chinese President Xi Jinping, in his 2019 New Year speech, urged Taiwan to follow in Hong Kong's footsteps, President Tsai Ing-wen of the DPP revived her popularity by reasserting Taiwan's sovereignty. Bolstered by the Hong Kong crisis, Tsai last week appeared to be coasting toward a major victory in Saturday's presidential election.

Far from enabling China's peaceful reunification, the "one country, two systems" model is undermining it. Perhaps this was inevitable, owing to a cause more fundamental than Xi's centralisation of power, the increasing interference by the Communist Party of China in Hong Kong's affairs, or even the basic contradiction between a one-party regime and a multi-party democracy. The Chinese state, built on a millennia-old paradigm of political order, cannot cope with intergovernmental conflict.

Modern democracy is based on division, within society and the state. In society, different groups, each with its own interests and priorities, compete for representation. In the state, there is a horizontal separation of powers (among the legislative, executive and judicial branches) and a vertical division of powers (among national and sub-national governments).

For countries with a history of foreign domination, such divisions may seem like weaknesses that can be exploited by outsiders using a "divide-and-rule" strategy. And, indeed, according to China's cyclical worldview, the commonwealth (tian xia) rotates between division (marked by chaos and war) and unity (which restores peace and order).

To be sure, China does maintain a separation of powers. But it is much more comfortable with horizontal checks and balances than vertical ones. For more than 2,000 years, Chinese imperial courts appointed a censor-in-chief to manage ministers and bureaucrats, and grandmasters of remonstrance to criticise emperors.

Conflicts between national and sub-national governments, however, were historically divided into three categories -- warlordism (ge ju), insubordination (bu chen), and foreign threat (wai huan) -- all of which are unambiguously negative. To this day, China's rulers distrust leaders with a local base, often choosing outsiders to serve as provincial governors and party bosses and reshuffling them regularly.

From the Chinese government's perspective, "Hong Kong ruled by Hong Kongers" (gang ren zhi gang) was already a risky concession. So it ruled out a directly elected chief executive and worked to suppress the opposition, fearing that local dissidents would act as foreign agents to challenge central government authority.

This effort backfired. China's interference undermined the ability of older "democrats" who identified as Chinese to deliver the changes the people demanded, so they were replaced by younger "localists". When Beijing attempted to suppress these figures -- including by purging them from the legislature in 2017 -- resistance intensified.

By the beginning of last year, when Lam introduced a bill that would make it easier to extradite criminal suspects to mainland China, the people of Hong Kong were fed up. China's government attempted to silence the protesters, including by arresting leading activists. The protest movement was thus left leaderless, making it impossible to negotiate a resolution.

Many of the young protesters now believe they have so little to lose that they effectively seek "mutually assured destruction". This "scorched Earth" approach renders Chinese threats of repression virtually impotent.

China now faces a dilemma. Unless democracy -- with its requisite division -- is shown to support the dream of civilisational resurgence, it will lack legitimacy among Chinese nationalists. But the only way to revive the "one country, two systems" rubric is to accept intergovernmental conflict -- a great leap toward embracing democracy.

Institutionalised respect for regional identity and autonomy have eased separatist sentiment in places such as Tamil Nadu, Scotland, Quebec, the Basque region and Flanders, and it could do the same in Hong Kong, and possibly even Taiwan. But if China continues to suppress intergovernmental conflict, the collapse of the "one country, two systems" model will be only a matter of time.

Chin-Huat Wong is a professor of political science at the Jeffrey Sachs Center on Sustainable Development at Sunway University in Malaysia. ©Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT (4)