'I don't want to scuffle with my colleagues. I want Hong Kong people to cast their own votes in an orderly way to show their views on universal suffrage.' Radical lawmaker Leung Kwok-hung, after being kicked out of the Legislative Council chamber during the Chief Executive's policy address. Background Chief Executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen had to stop his speech because of three disorderly lawmakers last Wednesday. The speech had many new business plans. But it said little about changes in how Hong Kong picks its leaders. Leung thinks Hong Kong's leaders should be picked by citizens. Leung said 'I don't want to scuffle with my colleagues' because he was carried out of Legco by six guards. They carried him out because he would not leave the chamber on his own. Leung said he wanted 'Hong Kong people to cast their own votes in an orderly way to show their views on universal suffrage' because it is part of a plan to change how Hong Kong picks its leaders. Universal suffrage is when every citizen gets to vote. Leung wants every Hong Kong citizen to be able to vote for the next chief executive. Half of the city's lawmakers are not voted in by citizens.