Chief Secretary for Administration
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Chief Secretary for Administration 政務司司長 | |
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Style | The Honourable |
Member of |
Government Secretariat Executive Council |
Reports to | Legislative Council |
Residence | Victoria House, 15 Barker Road, The Peak |
Appointer |
Central People's Government nomination by Chief Executive |
Term length | No longer than the Chief Executive's remaining term (No constitutional or statutory limits, but no CS would receive employment contract longer than the CE's remaining term since POAS was in place in 2002.) |
Inaugural holder | Anson Chan |
Formation | 1 July 1997 |
Website | CSO |
Politics and government of Hong Kong |
Legislature |
Foreign relations |
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Related topics Hong Kong portal |
Chief Secretary for Administration | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 政務司司長 | ||||||||
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The Chief Secretary for Administration (Chinese: 政務司司長), commonly known as the Chief Secretary of Hong Kong, is the most senior principal official of the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. The Chief Secretary is the head of the Government Secretariat which oversees the administration of the Region to which all other ministers belong, and is accountable for his or her policies and actions to the Chief Executive and to the Legislative Council.
The Chief Secretary formulates and implements government policy, gives advice to the Chief Executive as a member of the Executive Council, and is responsible for managing the Government's relationship with the Legislative Council and drawing up the Government's legislative programme. The office also exercises certain statutory functions, such as the handling of appeals from designated public bodies.[1]
Prior to the transfer of sovereignty of Hong Kong in 1997, the office was known simply as "Chief Secretary" (布政司), and before 1976, "Colonial Secretary" (輔政司).[2] Until the introduction of the Principal Officials Accountability System in 2002, the Chief Secretary was a civil service position, and in this capacity, the head of the public service. In 2005, Henry Tang became the first person who has not been a civil servant to be appointed to the office of the Chief Secretary.
List of Secretaries
Colonial Secretaries (1843–1976)
- George Alexander Malcolm (1843)
- John Robert Morrison (acting secretary, 1843)
- Sir Frederick Bruce (1844–1846)[3]
- William Caine (1846–1854)[4]
- William Thomas Mercer (1854–1868)[5]
- John Gardiner Austin (1868–1879)[6]
- William Henry Marsh (1879–1887)
- Frederick Stewart (1887–1889)
- Francis Fleming (1890–1892)
- George Thomas Michael O'Brien (1892–1895)
- Sir James Haldane Stewart Lockhart (1895–1902)
- Sir Francis Henry May (1902–1911)[7][8]
- Warren Delabere Barnes (1911)[9]
- Sir Claud Severn (1912–1925)
- Sir Wilfrid Thomas Southorn (1925–1936)
- Norman Lockhart Smith (1936–1941)
- Sir Franklin Charles Gimson (1941)
- David Mercer MacDougall (1945–1949)
- John Fearns Nicoll (1949–1952)
- Sir Robert Brown Black (1952–1955)
- Edgeworth Beresford David (1955–1958)
- Claude Bramall Burgess (1958–1963)
- Edmund Brinsley Teesdale (1963–1965)
- Michael David Irving Gass (1965–1970)
- Sir Hugh Selby Norman-Walker (1969–1973)
- Sir Denys Tudor Emil Roberts (1973–1976)
From the 1870s to 1902 the Colonial Secretary was de facto Lieutenant Governor of Hong Kong. The role was once held by the Commander of British Forces in Hong Kong. After 1902 the title disappeared from use as the second highest post was transferred to the Colonial Secretary and late Chief Secretary.
Chief Secretaries (1976–1997)
- Sir Denys Tudor Emil Roberts (1976–1978)
- Sir Jack Cater (1978–1981)
- Sir Charles Philip Haddon-Cave (1981–1985)
- Sir David Akers-Jones (1985–1987)
- Sir David Robert Ford (1987–1993)
- Anson Chan Fong On-sang (1993–1997)
Chief Secretaries for Administration (Post-1997)
Politiical party: Nonpartisan
№ | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Political party | Chief Executive | Term | Ref | ||
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Took office | Left office | Duration | |||||||
1 | Anson Chan Fang On-sang 陳方安生 (born 1940) |
1 July 1997 | 30 April 2001 | 3 years, 303 days | Nonpartisan | Tung Chee-hwa (1997–2005) |
1 | ||
2 | Donald Tsang Yam-kuen 曾蔭權 (born 1944) |
1 May 2001 | 31 May 2005[n 1] | 4 years, 30 days | Nonpartisan | ||||
2 | |||||||||
3 | Rafael Hui Si-yan 許仕仁 (born 1948) |
1 July 2005 | 30 June 2007 | 1 year, 364 days | Nonpartisan | Donald Tsang (2005–12) |
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4 | Henry Tang Ying-yen 唐英年 (born 1952) |
1 July 2007 | 28 September 2011 | 4 years, 89 days | Nonpartisan | 3 | |||
5 | Stephen Lam Sui-lung 林瑞麟 (born 1955) |
29 September 2011 | 30 June 2012 | 275 days | Nonpartisan | ||||
6 | Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor 林鄭月娥 (born 1957) |
1 July 2012 | Incumbent | 4 years, 161 days | Nonpartisan | Leung Chun-ying (Since 2012) |
4 | ||
- ↑ Resigned on 25 May 2005, with effect from 1 June 2005, Michael Suen served as acting chief between 25 May to 30 June 2005.
Residence
The Chief Secretary resides at an official residence at 15 Barker Road, The Peak, Hong Kong, which is also known as Victoria House and Victoria Flats.
See also
- Hong Kong Government
- Government departments and agencies in Hong Kong
- Secretary for Justice
- Financial Secretary (Hong Kong)
- Secretary for Education and Manpower
- Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food
- Lieutenant Governor of Hong Kong - second in command from 1843 to 1870s
References
- General
- Choa, Gerald H. (2000). "Appendix II: Colonial Secretaries of Hong Kong, 1843–1912". The Life and Times of Sir Kai Ho Kai: A Prominent Figure in Nineteenth-Century Hong Kong (2nd ed.). Hong Kong: Chinese University Press. p. 274. ISBN 978-962-201-873-0. OCLC 44267286.
- Specific
- ↑ Chief Secretary's Office, Hong Kong Government
- ↑ Roberts, Denys (Apr 18, 2006). Another Disaster: Hong Kong Sketches. The Radcliffe Press. ISBN 9781845111120.
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 20315. p. 442. 9 February 1844. Retrieved 2009-06-27.
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 20709. p. 834. 26 February 1847. Retrieved 2009-06-27.
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 21635. p. 3909. 1 December 1854. Retrieved 2009-06-27.
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 23353. p. 772. 18 February 1868. Retrieved 2009-06-27.
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 27423. p. 2334. 8 April 1902.
- ↑ Clementi, Cecil (1912). "General Observations" (PDF). Hong Kong Annual Report (1911). p. 24. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
- ↑ "Death of Mr. W.D.Barnes". The Straits Times. Singapore. October 30, 1911. p. 7. Retrieved October 3, 2014.