Bernard Chan Pak-li


Bernard Chan Pak-li is a Hong Kong politician with the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong. Outside politics he is involved in the pharmaceuticals industry.

Scientific career

In November 2004, Chan became the director of research and development at the LifeTec Group, a pharmaceutical company which developed recombinant protein drugs for the treatment of liver disease. In 2006, he and his friends co-founded Comprehensive Drug Enterprises, which would go on to win the Hong Kong Award for Industries' Technological Achievement Award in 2007.
Chan is also a member of the Hong Kong Biotechnology Organization's Executive Council.

In politics

Chan first ran for public office in the 2007 local elections for Kwun Tong District Council to represent Ping Shek. With the help of noted film director Raymond Wongthe father of his then-girlfriend Alvina Wong Yee-kwan — in canvassing the district, Chan was able to receive 62.9% of votes cast, defeating Yun Kwun-wai of the Civic Party and two independent candidates in a landslide to succeed fellow DAB member Chan Kam-lam in the Ping Shek seat. He was returned to the same seat in the 2011 elections with an even larger margin of victory, receiving 77.2% of votes cast to defeat Lam Sum-shing of the League of Social Democrats.
In February 2013, Chan was nominated by the Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development to become the political assistant for the Commerce and Economic Development Bureau, and renounced his U.S. citizenship.
He resigned from the Kwun Tong District Council to take up the post, triggering a by-election. Chan Kam-lam of the DAB stated that the party respected his decision and had no intention of blocking party members from resigning to serve the public in other fields, and that there were ongoing internal discussions in the DAB about whether or not to field a candidate in the resulting by-election.

Personal life

Chan's father Chan Chung-nam is an energy businessman in mainland China and a member of the Standing Committee of the Zhanjiang People's Political Consultative Conference. Chan himself graduated from Hong Kong's La Salle College in 1993, and went on to receive a PhD from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina in 2003. He married Michelle Li, originally of Xinyang, Henan in mainland China, in February 2014; the two met at a technology event in 2010.