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Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act

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Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019
Great Seal of the United States
Long titleAn act to amend the Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992 and for other purposes.
Enacted bythe 116th United States Congress
EffectiveNovember 27, 2019
Citations
Public lawPub. L. 116–76 (text) (PDF)
Statutes at Large113 Stat. 1161
Codification
Acts amendedUnited States–Hong Kong Policy Act
U.S.C. sections created22 U.S.C. §§ 57255726
U.S.C. sections amended22 U.S.C. § 5721
Legislative history

The Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019 (HKHRDA)[1] (S. 1838; Pub. L. 116–76 (text) (PDF)) is a United States federal law that requires the U.S. government to impose sanctions against mainland China and Hong Kong officials considered responsible for human rights abuses in Hong Kong, and requires the United States Department of State and other agencies to conduct an annual review to determine whether changes in Hong Kong's political status (its relationship with mainland China) justify changing the unique, favorable trade relations between the U.S. and Hong Kong.[2][3][4][5] The passage of the bill was supported by pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong,[2] and in 2019 received near-unanimous support in Congress.[6]

Initially introduced in 2014 following the Umbrella Movement and 2014 democracy protests in Hong Kong, the legislation was re-introduced to the next three successive Congresses, but did not gain a vote until 2019, following the 2019 Hong Kong extradition bill proposal and the ensuing protests against it.[7] A House version of the bill unanimously passed in the United States House of Representatives through a voice vote in October 2019.[8] In November 2019, the Senate version of the bill, with amendments that differ from the House bill,[9] unanimously passed the Senate on a voice vote.[10][11] The House accepted the Senate version of the bill later that month, sending it to the desk of President Donald Trump,[12] who signed it one week later.[13] The bill was accompanied by a companion bill restricting U.S. exports of crowd control devices to the Hong Kong police forces, which passed both chambers of Congress unanimously and signed by Trump on the same occasion.[14]

Legislative history

[edit]

2014–2018

[edit]

The bill was initially introduced in 2014 during the 113th Congress as an amendment to the United States-Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992,[15] following the Umbrella Movement and 2014 democracy protests in Hong Kong.[15][7][16] The House bill (H.R. 5696) was sponsored by Republican Representative Chris Smith (R-NJ),[17] while the Senate bill (S.2922) was sponsored by Sherrod Brown (D-OH).[18] The act stated that it was U.S. policy to: "(1) reaffirm the principles set forth in the United States-Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992; (2) support the democratic aspirations of the people of Hong Kong; (3) urge China's government to uphold its commitments to Hong Kong; (4) support the establishment by 2017 of a democratic option to nominate and elect the Chief Executive of Hong Kong, and the establishment by 2020 of democratic elections for all members of the Hong Kong Legislative Council; and (5) support freedom of the press."[18]

The act was reintroduced into the next two proceeding sessions of Congress: in the 114th Congress as H.R. 1159[19] and S. 3469,[20] and in the 115th Congress as H.R. 3856[21] and S. 417.[22]

2019

[edit]

The 2019 Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act was introduced during the 116th Congress, and gained traction in light of the 2019 Hong Kong extradition bill proposal and the ensuing protests against it;[23] House bill (H.R.3289[3]) was sponsored by Jim McGovern (D-MA)[23] and Chris Smith (R-NJ) while the Senate bill (S.1838[24]) was sponsored by Marco Rubio (R-FL). Co-sponsors for the House bill included Tom Suozzi (D-NY), Scott Perry (R-PA), Brad Sherman (D-CA), and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA). Co-sponsors for the Senate bill included Jim Risch (R-ID), Bob Menendez (D-NJ), Ben Cardin (D-MD), Tom Cotton (R-AR), Angus King (I-ME), Ed Markey (D-MA), and Josh Hawley (R-MO).[23]

On October 15, 2019, the House version of the bill unanimously passed in a voice vote in the House of Representatives.[8][25]

On November 14, 2019, Senators Jim Risch and Marco Rubio began a process for the United States Senate to pass the legislation by unanimous voice vote.[8] The bill acquired 50 sponsors on November 18, 2019,[26] all but guaranteeing its passage. The bill passed the Senate via unanimous consent on November 19, 2019,[10] with amendments that differed between the two versions.[9]

On November 20, 2019, the House passed the Senate version of the Act[27] on a 417–1 vote.[28] Congressman Thomas Massie (R-KY) was the lone dissenting vote.[29] The House passed the Senate version in order to expedite the process.[2] The passage of the bills by both chambers sent the legislation to President Donald Trump.[2] In an appearance on Fox & Friends shortly after the bill's passage, Trump said that he might veto the bill, saying that it might impact his talks with China over the U.S.-China trade war, saying, "We have to stand with Hong Kong, but I'm also standing with President Xi [Jinping]; he's a friend of mine."[30] Trump signed the bill on November 27, 2019.[13] As he was signing the bill, Trump issued a signing statement hedging his support, saying that "certain provisions of the Act," which he did not specify, "would interfere with the exercise of the President’s constitutional authority to state the foreign policy of the United States," and that his administration would "treat each of the provisions of the act consistently with the president's constitutional authorities with respect to foreign relations."[31][32] In response, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer wrote, "Decency, humanity, and the rule of law compel you to enforce it. Stop playing games."[31]

Provisions of the act

[edit]

The Act is divided into ten sections:

  • Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents
  • Sec. 2. Definitions
  • Sec. 3. Statement of policy
  • Sec. 4. Amendments to the United States-Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992
  • Sec. 5. Annual report on violations of United States export control laws and United Nations sanctions occurring in Hong Kong.
  • Sec. 6. Protecting United States citizens and others from rendition to the People's Republic of China.
  • Sec. 7. Sanctions relating to undermining fundamental freedoms and autonomy in Hong Kong.
  • Sec. 8. Sanctions reports.
  • Sec. 9. Sense of Congress on People's Republic of China state-controlled media.
  • Sec. 10. Sense of Congress on commercial exports of crowd control equipment to Hong Kong.[4]

The HKHRDA directed various departments to assess whether political developments in Hong Kong justify changing Hong Kong's unique treatment under U.S. law,[4] and specifically:

  • Requires the Secretary of State to issue an annual certification of Hong Kong's autonomy to justify special treatment afforded to Hong Kong by the U.S. Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992.[23]
  • Requires the President to identify, and impose sanctions against, persons responsible for the abductions of Hong Kong booksellers and journalists and those complicit in suppressing basic freedoms in Hong Kong, including those complicit in the rendition of individuals, in connection to their exercise of internationally recognized rights, to mainland China for detention or trial.[23] Sanctions against officials responsible for human rights abuses in Hong Kong would include asset freezes[33] under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act[4] as well as visa bans,[33] including the denial of visa applications to travel in the United States and the revocation of existing visas.[4]
  • Requires the President to issue a strategy to protect U.S. citizens and businesses from the risks posed by a revised Fugitive Offenders Ordinance, including by determining whether to revise the U.S.–Hong Kong extradition agreement and the State Department's travel advisory for Hong Kong.[23]
  • Requires the Secretary of Commerce to issue an annual report assessing whether the government of Hong Kong is adequately enforcing both U.S. export regulations regarding sensitive dual-use items and U.S. and U.N. sanctions, particularly regarding Iran and North Korea.[23]
  • Makes clear that visa applicants shall not be denied visas on the basis of the applicant's arrest, detention or other adverse government action taken as a result of their participation in the protest activities related to pro-democracy advocacy, human rights, or the rule of law in Hong Kong.[23]

The application of targeted sanctions directed by the Act is modeled after similar provisions in the Magnitsky Act and the Global Magnitsky Act.[34] Legal scholar Julian Ku notes that the sanctions provision of the HKHRDA "may be read to require the president to impose targeted individual sanctions" because the legislation states that the president "shall" impose sanctions against individuals determined to have violated the act's human rights provisions.[34] Ku notes, however, that because the HKHRDA "gives the president the power to 'determine' who has violated those human rights obligations" the president might 'refuse to designate anyone as an HKHRDA human rights offender, even if there is substantial evidence of that person's violations."[34] Ku suggests that "this legal ambiguity as to whether the president can simply refuse to designate anyone as violating the HKHRDA's targeted sanctions provisions could become an area of intrabranch conflict if the White House refuses to exercise its authority under this section."[34]

Reactions

[edit]

U.S. newspaper editorials

[edit]

The editorial boards of several U.S. newspapers called for passage of the Act, including USA Today,[35] The Dallas Morning News,[36] The New York Times,[37] New York Post,[38] The Boston Globe,[39] The Washington Post,[40] and The Wall Street Journal.[41]

Hong Kong pro-democracy movement

[edit]

Hong Kong protesters against the extradition bill and members from the Hong Kong pro-democracy camp have called for the passage of the Act.[42] Activists Denise Ho and Joshua Wong appeared before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) in September 2019 where they urged sitting congresspersons to support the bill and rejected the suggestion that the bill constituted an inappropriate U.S. involvement in another country's affairs.[43][44] Wong and his fellow Demosisto activist Jeffrey Ngo urged passage of the bill in a 2017 op-ed in the Washington Post.[45]

One day after the bill's passage on November 27, pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong celebrated the new law and held a pro-American rally.[46] At the rally, held on U.S. Thanksgiving Day, Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Nathan Law called the law a "timely Thanksgiving present."[46] Thousands of activists at the "Thanksgiving Rally" waved American flags and sang The Star-Spangled Banner, the U.S. national anthem, expressing gratitude to the United States, Congress and President Trump for passing the law.[47]

Academics

[edit]

Julian Ku, a legal scholar at Hofstra University School of Law, called the HKHRDA "redundant, but still worthwhile."[34] Ku wrote:

The president already possesses the legal authority to execute the sanctions powers granted to him by the HKHRDA. This redundancy does not make the HKHRDA meaningless.... But it does mean we should understand the law not as a grant of authority to the president, but as an effort to ensure the executive branch exercises all of its economic sanctioning powers to support the Hong Kong pro-democracy movement. For this reason, the real significance of the HKHRDA is not the granting of legal authority but instead the delivery of a political message. That message is that Congress will keep Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement a central issue in U.S.-China relations no matter what other bilateral issues (such as trade) arise and no matter who prevails in the next presidential election.[34]

Academics supporting the Act include Larry Diamond,[48] Tom Campbell,[49] Alexander Görlach,[50] and James Carafano.[51]

In a commentary on Lawfare, Alvin Y.H. Cheung noted that despite "vocal backing from some Hong Kongers, and widespread support within Congress, the bill was not nearly as popular with longtime China hands in the United States."[52] For example, Susan Thornton, a senior fellow at the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale University who previously served as acting Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs under the Trump administration, called the act a "huge mistake" that would hurt Hongkongers and play into the hands of Beijing.[53] Cheung was critical of this view, arguing that past U.S. policy toward Hong Kong had failed to stop the Chinese government from diminishing Hong Kong's autonomy and undercutting the "one country, two systems" principle.[52]

William Lam of the Chinese University of Hong Kong said that while Trump was unlikely to impose sanctions because of his interest in negotiating a U.S.-China trade deal, the protesters had "won a very important moral victory" given the law's near-unanimous passage through Congress.[54]

Business interests

[edit]

The American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong (AmCham) has said that anything that changes the status of Hong Kong 'would have a chilling effect not only on U.S. trade and investment in Hong Kong but would send negative signals internationally about Hong Kong's trusted position in the global economy."[55][1]

An analyst with the Eurasia Group[56] and academic at Peking University[54] both opined that the passage of the act did not affect the extant and concurrent negotiations between the United States and People's Republic of China to resolve their trade war.

Chinese and Hong Kong governments

[edit]

China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang responded that the bill "fully reveals the ill intentions of some people in the United States to mess up Hong Kong and contain China's development."[57] The managing director of a Hong Kong pro-democracy group said through a statement sent to Newsweek that the foreign ministry's response showed that the PRC was "sensitive and susceptible to international pressure."[58] Beijing and state media in mainland China, such as the official Communist Party newspaper People's Daily, condemned the move and said the country would take countermeasures[6][59][60] with the editor-in-chief of the state-run, nationalistic Global Times, warning that China could bar the HKHRDA's drafters from entering mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau.[61][62] Experts said that Beijing's desire to prioritize a resolution to its trade war with the United States limited the retaliatory measures that it could (and eventually did) undertake.[54][62][63]

The Hong Kong government criticized the legislation, calling it "unnecessary and unwarranted"[1] and an interference into the internal affairs of Hong Kong;[64] this position was criticized by the act's supporters.[65][66]

Chinese retaliation following enactment of the HKHRDA

[edit]

On December 2, 2019, the Chinese government retaliated against the U.S. for the passage of the HKHRDA by suspending visits of U.S. naval vessels and U.S. military aircraft to Hong Kong and by sanctioning several U.S.-based NGOs (including the National Endowment for Democracy, Human Rights Watch, Freedom House, the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, and the International Republican Institute), whom the Chinese government allege orchestrated the Hong Kong protests.[63][67] These steps were mostly symbolic.[63] During previous periods of heightened U.S.-China tensions, the Chinese government had previously suspended U.S. warships from visiting Hong Kong.[63][67] China also already tightly restricted the activities of foreign NGOs in China, particularly since 2016, and most of the NGOs sanctioned by China do not operate on the mainland.[63][67] A U.S. State Department official said that "false accusations of foreign interference" against U.S.-based NGOs were "intended to distract from the legitimate concerns of Hongkongers."[67]

In the aftermath of the HKHRDA's passage, officials denied entry to Macau to a number of Hong Kong residents, journalists, and foreigners, including the heads of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong.[68][69][70]

U.S. Congress

[edit]

The act received near-unanimous support in Congress,[6][7] and was seen as a "remarkable display of bipartisan unity" in an otherwise highly polarized political environment.[34]

In the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) described the HKHRDA as a reaffirmation of "America's commitment to democracy and human rights and the rule of law in the face of Beijing's crackdown."[71] House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Eliot Engel (D-NY) and ranking member Michael McCaul (R-TX) both issued statements strongly supporting the act,[72][71] as did Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Jim Risch (R-ID)[73] and ranking member Bob Menendez (D-NJ).[74]

Representative Chris Smith, one of the initial sponsors of the House bill, dismissed as "cowardly propaganda" the suggestion that passage of the act would bolster the Chinese government's efforts to depict the Hong Kong protests as "rioting" directed by the West.[7]

International

[edit]

Following the passage of the HKHRDA in the United States, activists for Hong Kong democracy called upon Canada to adopt similar legislation.[75]

[edit]
An act to prohibit the commercial export of covered munitions items to the Hong Kong Police Force
Great Seal of the United States
Long titleAn act to prohibit the commercial export of covered munitions items to the Hong Kong Police Force.
Enacted bythe 116th United States Congress
EffectiveNovember 27, 2019
Citations
Public lawPub. L. 116–77 (text) (PDF)
Statutes at Large133 Stat. 1173
Legislative history
Major amendments
William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021

A separate bill, S. 2710, Pub. L. 116–77 (text) (PDF), passed by Congress at the same time as the HKHRDA, banned the export of certain types of crowd control munitions—specifically, "tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets, foam rounds, bean bag rounds, pepper balls, water cannons, handcuffs, shackles, stun guns, and tasers"—from the U.S. to the Hong Kong Police Force and Hong Kong Auxiliary Police Force. The legislation passed the House on a 417–0 and the Senate by unanimous consent.[76] President Trump also signed S. 2710 on November 27, 2019.[14] The act has a sunset clause providing that the prohibition expires one year after enactment.[76] The prohibition was later extended to December 31, 2021, by Section 1251 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021.

Aftermath

[edit]

HKHRDA as a candidacy criteria in 2020 Hong Kong legislative election

[edit]

HKHRDA has become one of the concerns regarding the candidacy criteria of the 2020 Hong Kong legislative election. Pro-democracy candidate Ventus Lau was being asked by the electoral officer Amy Yeung (楊蕙心) regarding his stance on HKHRDA. Yeung asked if Lau would continue urging the sanction of US towards Hong Kong, and judged that Lau was utilizing foreign power to influence Hong Kong. She continued by asking how Lau could fulfil the requirement of being loyal to HKSAR and the Basic Law.[77]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ a b c d Yaffe-Bellany, David; Rappeport, Alan (November 20, 2019). "U.S. Bill Supporting Hong Kong Rights Heads to Trump's Desk". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on November 21, 2019. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  3. ^ a b "H.R.3289 – Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act". Archived from the original on September 12, 2019. Retrieved September 10, 2019 – via Congress.gov. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  4. ^ a b c d e Congressional Research Service. "S. 1838: Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019". Archived from the original on September 27, 2019. Retrieved September 27, 2019 – via GovTrack.us. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ Congressional Research Service. "H.R. 3289: Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019". Archived from the original on September 27, 2019. Retrieved September 27, 2019 – via GovTrack. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
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  32. ^ Statement by the President Archived March 24, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, White House Press Office (November 27, 2019).
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  42. ^ Some relevant sources include:
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  57. ^ Wong, Catherine; Jiangtao, Shi (September 26, 2019). "China lashes out at proposed US law". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on September 27, 2019. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
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  63. ^ a b c d e Amy Qin, China Hits Back at U.S. Over Hong Kong Bill in a Mostly Symbolic Move Archived December 3, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, New York Times (December 2, 2019).
  64. ^ Ng, Eileen (September 9, 2019). "Hong Kong tells US to stay out; students form protest chains". Associated Press. Archived from the original on October 16, 2019.
  65. ^ Berlinger, Joshua (November 28, 2019). "Protesters celebrate a victory after Trump signs Hong Kong human rights act". CNN. Archived from the original on November 28, 2019. Retrieved November 28, 2019.
  66. ^ "Hong Kong protests: China warns US over Human Rights and Democracy Act". BBC News. November 28, 2019. Archived from the original on November 28, 2019. Retrieved November 28, 2019.
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