Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Roy Kwong

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Preceded by
  
Albert Ho

Occupation
  
District Councillor

Religion
  
Christianity

Constituency
  
District Council (Second)

Political party
  
Democratic Party

Profession
  
Social worker

Party
  
Democratic Party

Roy Kwong httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
9 February 1983 (age 34) Hong Kong (
1983-02-09
)

Similar
  
James To, Holden Chow, Leung Yiu‑chung, Eddie Chu, Hui Chi‑fung

Profiles

Roy Kwong Chun-yu (Chinese: 鄺俊宇; born 9 February 1983) is a Hong Kong politician and novelist. He is member of the Democratic Party and member of the Yuen Long District Council for Pek Long. He became member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong in 2016 through the District Council (Second) "super seat".

Biography

Kwong worked in a youth centre in Long Ping Estate, Yuen Long before joined the officer of the Democratic Party's Yuen Long District Councillor Zachary Wong as a community officer in 2004 and subsequently joined the party.

In 2007 District Council elections, 24-year-old Kwong ran in Pek Long of the Yuen Long District Council, defeating a veteran pro-Beijing Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) incumbent Chan Siu-kay. He went on to be re-elected in 2011 and 2015.

As a 25-year-old, Kwong became the youngest candidate in the 2008 Legislative Council election, running in New Territories West with Cheung Yin-tung but was not elected. In the 2012 Legislative Council election, he ran with party chairman Albert Ho in the territory-wide District Council (Second) “super seat” and successfully helped Ho to be elected. In September 2016, he will succeed outgoing Albert Ho in contesting the District Council (Second) “super seat” in the Legislative Council election along with veteran James To.

Kwong is also a romantic fiction writer. He published his successful debut book Love You Like the First Time We Met in 2014. His second book, There is a Kind of Happiness Called Forgetting, sold more than 10,000 copies at the annual Hong Kong Book Fair in the same year. He also drew attention online after he published a short love essay entitled "The Last Time You Get" on Whatsapp on the internet in 2012. Kwong had attracted over 92,000 "likes" on Facebook since the essay. Up to 2015, he has published seven romantic novels. His peculiar writing style is imitated and called “Kwong-style”.

He became member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong in 2016 through the District Council (Second) "super seat", in which he won nearly 500,000 votes.

References

Roy Kwong Wikipedia