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Hong Kong finance chief quits, leadership bid expected

  (Associated Press)
Hong Kong
Mon, December 12, 2016

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Hong Kong finance chief quits, leadership bid expected Upbeat -- In this Nov. 4, 2016 file photo, Financial Secretary John Tsang speaks during a press conference at the government headquarters in Hong Kong. Hong Kong’s financial chief resigned Monday in what is widely seen as a prelude to a leadership bid for the southern Chinese city’s top job. Tsang tendered his resignation, the government said, in a move that came after the city’s deeply unpopular current leader, Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying, announced unexpectedly on Friday that he would not seek a second term in office. (AP/Vincent Yu, File)

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ong Kong's financial chief resigned Monday, in what is widely seen as a prelude to a leadership bid for the southern Chinese city's top job.

Financial Secretary John Tsang tendered his resignation, the government said, in a move that came after the city's deeply unpopular current leader, Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying, announced unexpectedly on Friday that he would not seek a second term in office.

Rumors and speculation have been swirling for months that Tsang would step down and put himself forward as a candidate to replace Leung when his five-year term ends in June.

Tsang has been dubbed "Mr. Pringles" because his mustache reminds many Hong Kongers of the potato chip's mascot. Educated in the US, Tsang has been the city's finance chief since 2007.

Tsang is Hong Kong's second-most-popular public official, with an approval rating of 62 percent, according to a survey last month by Hong Kong University pollsters. Leung, meanwhile, was dead last with a 71 percent disapproval rating. About 1,000 people were polled for the survey, which had a margin of error of 3 percentage points.

Leung, who cited family reasons for not continuing in the job, is widely reviled for his hard-line stance against pro-democracy activists and lawmakers and because he's suspected of having deep ties to China's communist leaders. Tsang, meanwhile, has a more easygoing public persona.

Hong Kong leaders are chosen by a 1,200-member panel of mostly pro-Beijing tycoons and elites, which is scheduled to make its pick in March. So far one person, retired judge Woo Kwok-hing, has publicly declared his intention to run for the job leading the city of 7.2 million. (**)

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