Pan-democrats' proposal may run into brick wall
Elsie Leung says suggestion for 2017 vote panel goes against NPC Standing Committee decision

A proposal by pan-democrats that the nominating committee for the 2017 chief executive election be elected by all 3.2 million registered voters may not be in line with a decision by the nation's top legislature, says a Beijing-friendly heavyweight.
The Alliance for True Democracy also suggests that candidates who secure nominations from a certain proportion of the city's voters should be allowed to compete for the top job under "one man, one vote".
But Elsie Leung Oi-sie, deputy director of the Basic Law Committee, said this might result in a situation where dozens of candidates ran for chief executive.
Alternatively, the alliance said, a candidate with support of at least an eighth of nominating committee members could stand under universal suffrage.
Leung said it would be difficult for the election process to be conducted smoothly if there were too many candidates.
"While I appreciate the alliance's announcement of its proposal for public discussion, the suggestions appear to be inconsistent with a decision by the NPC Standing Committee in 2007," she said.
I must also emphasise [that] constitutional reform should, and could only, be based on the Basic Law and the National People's Congress' decisions. As long as we stick to this constitutional foundation, we have the condition for consensus, and for pushing forward democratisation in Hong Kong