Hong Kong's legislative debate over bus seat belt rules underscores that even perfect government-drafted laws require lawmakers to scrutinise them without fear of their constitutional duty. An opinion piece argues that in the executive-led system, the legislature acts as gatekeepers to ensure laws are sound in both spirit and wording. Past obstructionism had stalled the city's progress.
Hong Kong operates an executive-led system, where the executive branch formulates and implements policies, as well as drafts and introduces bills, motions, and subordinate legislation. The legislature's role is to enact, amend, or repeal laws. Thus, lawmakers serve as gatekeepers to ensure the laws they pass are good not only in spirit but also in precise wording. The opinion piece stresses that regardless of intentions, legislation must be correctly worded, at minimum.
The bus seat belt fiasco serves as a case in point, proving that good governance requires more than efficiency—it demands thorough legislative scrutiny. This episode highlights potential flaws in lawmaking, urging lawmakers to perform their constitutional duty without hesitation. Key figures and terms include Legco, Lau Siu-Kai, Tai Po, Michael Tien Puk-sun, Basic Law, Beijing, Legislative Council, and Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen.
The article recalls the not-so-good old days when obstructionists used disruptive and stalling tactics to halt progress, leaving the city straitjacketed by confrontational politics and with long-standing problems unresolved. It calls on lawmakers to scrutinise bills fearlessly to avoid past pitfalls.