Tiffany Yuen


Tiffany Yuen Ka-wai is a Hong Kong activist and politician, who has been a member of the Southern District Council for Tin Wan since 2020. She was the vice chairperson of Demosistō before resigning from the party in 2018.

Activism

Yuen was educated at the City University of Hong Kong and graduated with a bachelor's degree in Chinese Language. She was dedicated to activism during her student life, including Yuen's participation in the 2013 Hong Kong dock strike and the protests against the North East New Territories New Development Areas Planning. She was also committed to the Umbrella Revolution in 2014.
After joining the Demosistō party in 2016, Yuen was elected vice chairperson in 2017 and focused her efforts on community outreach. In light of Demosistō members losing their candidacy due to their promotion of "democratic self-determination", Yuen left the party in 2018 to continue her community services in Tin Wan Estate as an independent. Speaking of her departure, Yuen stated, "In a normal society, no election runner should be deprived of the right because of his political views." Subsequently, Yuen had found employment as an assistant to pro-democracy legislator Au Nok-hin.
Yuen has a long history of championing equality, women's rights, and LGBT rights in Hong Kong. She was a panel speaker at Women’s Festival Hong Kong in 2018 and 2019, the city's sole festival dedicated to womanhood. She had also spoken to the media condemning instances of sexual harassment and police brutality. Yuen was among the politicians who denounced the homophobic language used by lawmaker Kwok Wai-keung. According to Yuen, these experiences of discrimination served as the motivation in her commitment to equality.

Political career

District Council

Yuen ran in the 2019 District Council election for the Tin Wan constituency, where she pledged her commitment to improve the living conditions of the local residents. Her opponent was the pro-Beijing incumbent Chan Fu-ming, who held his position since 2007 and remained uncontested until he was challenged by Yuen. On 25 November, she defeated Chan with 61.7% of the votes, earning Yuen a seat on the Southern District Council.

Legislative Council bid

In 2020, Yuen announced her intention to run in the Hong Kong legislative election within the Hong Kong Island constituency. She was endorsed by former Demosistō chairman and legislator Nathan Law, who withdrew from the election and left Hong Kong in light of the national security law was passed. Yuen contested in the pro-democracy primaries, where she emerged as the runner-up behind incumbent legislator Hui Chi-fung of the Democratic Party. She obtained 19,884 votes, representing 21.94% of the electorate, and secured a nomination spot in the general election.
On 27 July, Yuen fielded questions from the returning officer to determine her eligibility to run in the election, an opaque process that nominally determined whether she had objected to the enactment of the national security law, or was sincere in statements made disavowing separatism. As part of her response, Yuen took down an Instagram photo that displayed the words "Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times". She had uploaded the photo earlier in January before the slogan was banned in July based on the national security law.
On 30 July, Yuen was told her election nomination was 'invalid', as one of a dozen pro-democracy candidates disqualified on the same day, including Demosistō founder Joshua Wong.

Personal life

Yuen was previously in a long-term relationship with Nathan Law. The two broke up in 2019, citing personality differences but remained on amicable terms.