Wong Pak-yu


Henry Wong Pak-yu is a Hong Kong politician and social activist. He is the spokesman of the local community group Tin Shui Wai New Force and also a member of the Information Technology subsector in the Election Committee. In 2019, he won in the District Council election and became a member the Yuen Long District Council for Tin Heng.

Biography

Wong graduated from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology with a Bachelor of Engineering degree, majoring in Computer Science and Engineering. He started his career in the financial industry as an IT Support/Help Desk Engineer. Inspired by the Umbrella Revolution, Wong joined the Tin Shui Wai New Force at the end of 2014 and later became a spokesperson of the organisation.
Wong participated in the 2015 District Council election, running in Tin Heng against incumbent Luk Chung-hung of the pro-Beijing Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions. He received 26.8% of the vote, losing the election to Luk. He also stood as a second candidate with Wong Chun-kit of the localist Youngspiration in the 2016 Legislative Council election. His ticket received 9,928 votes, ranking 14th place and was not elected. In the December Election Committee Subsector elections, Wong ran in the Information Technology subsector under the "IT Vision" banner. He was successfully elected as one of the 1,200 electors who had the power to elect the Chief Executive in 2017. Wong nominated retired judge Woo Kwok-hing, but decided to cast a blank vote in the election to protest the undemocratic electoral system.
In 2019, Wong challenged Luk Chung-hung again in the 2019 District Council election within the Tin Heng constituency. Riding with the pro-democracy wave amid the anti-extradition protests, Wong defeated Luk with 61.2% of the votes and was elected to the Yuen Long District Council.
Wong ran in the pro-democracy primaries for the 2020 Legislative Council election in the District Council constituency. With 71,706 votes, he came in third after Kwong Chun-yu and Lester Shum, while surpassing James To, the longest-serving incumbent lawmaker. Wong was nominated as one of the four candidates in the general election.