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members of the District Boards, Municipal Councils and the Heung Yee Kuk. They made clear that for the reasons noted above, it would not be appropriate for members of the 1991 Legislative Council, or Hong Kong representatives of the NPC and CPPCC to serve on the Election Committee simply by virtue of their membership of these bodies. During Round 14, in another effort to narrow the gap, the British side confirmed that NPC and CPPCC representatives would be free to stand for election to the Election Committee; and accepted the Chinese proposal that the size of the 1995 Election Committee should be about 600, as part of an overall package deal.
60. On voting method, the British side proposed that the Functional Constituencies would elect the first three sectors by the block-vote method, ie each Functional Constituency elector would have as many votes as the number of members to be returned by that Functional Constituency.
Elections within the Election Committee would use the single transferable vote method. Any registered voter who was eligible to serve as a LegCo member would be eligible for election by the Election Committee provided he or she secured at least five nominations by Election Committee members.
61. In the view of Her Majesty's Government and the Hong Kong Government, this revised proposal, although less simple than the Governor's original proposal, would meet the essential requirements by ensuring that the Election Committee would be elected by people who had been elected fairly and openly in Hong Kong, through either the functional constituencies or the District Boards, and that the elections inside the Election Committee would take place in an open and fair manner.
Functional Constituencies
62.
The Hong Kong Government's 1988 White Paper defined functional constituencies as representing economic and
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