HKU POP releases the latest ratings of the Top 10 Legislative CouncillorsBack

 
Press Release on February 3, 2015

| Special Announcements | Abstract | Latest Figures | Opinion Daily | Commentary | Future Release (Tentative) |
| Detailed Findings (Rating of Top Ten Legislative Councillors) |


Special Announcements

(1) The Public Opinion Programme (POP) of The University of Hong Kong has conducted a headcount exercise on February 1 and released the preliminary results on the same day. POP will further release the details of the headcount on February 6 via the "HKU POP Site" (http://hkupop.pori.hk), and then upload the video clippings to the "PopCon Site" (http://popcon.hk) for people to verify the figures

 

(2) To facilitate academic study and rational discussion, POP has already released for public examination some time ago via its "POP Site" the raw data of all 65 regular rating surveys of CE CY Leung, as well as the 181 regular rating surveys of former CE Donald Tsang and 239 regular rating surveys of former CE CH Tung, along with related demographics of respondents. Please follow normal academic standards when using or citing such data.



Abstract

POP conducted a double stage survey on the ratings of Legislative Councillors in January, by means of random telephone surveys conducted by real interviewers. The latest survey of top 10 Legislative Councillors shows that compared to three months ago, in terms of familiarity, James To who ranked second last time has dropped out of the "top 10" list and replaced by Tam Yiu-chung. In terms of absolute ratings, the scores of 7 out of the 9 who stayed on the list have gone down, 2 have gone up. Among them, the rise in rating of Jasper Tsang and drops in ratings of Emily Lau, Lee Cheuk-yan and Leung Kwok-hung all go beyond sampling errors. That of Jasper Tsang has climbed to his own record high since he first appeared on the list in 1997, while those of Alan Leong, Emily Lau and Lee Cheuk-yan have again dropped to their new lows since 2006, 1994 and 1995. In terms of relative rankings, Jasper Tsang continues to top the list, now for 8 consecutive times since April 2013. Regina Ip goes up two positions to rank second. Tam Yiu-chung re-enters the list to rank third. Alan Leong goes down one position to rank fourth, Emily Lau and Albert Ho both go up one place to rank fifth and sixth respectively, while Lee Cheuk-yan goes down two places to rank seventh. Leung Kwok-hung, Albert Chan and Wong Yuk-man remain at the eighth to tenth positions unchanged. Three months ago, according to our survey, councillors from all camps were losers of the mass movement. Our latest survey shows that the popularity of pro-establishment councillors seems to be recovering, while that of pan-democratic councillors is still going down. However, other than President Jasper Tsang, the popularity ratings of all councillors on the list fall below 50, meaning that Legco is still weak in popularity. It should be noted that our list of "top 10" only includes Legco members who are best known to the public, ranked according to their support ratings. Some of the other 60 councillors may well have very high or low support ratings, but because they are not the most well-known councillors, they do not appear on the "top 10" list by design. The maximum sampling errors of the ratings registered fall between +/-1.7 and +/-2.5 at 95% confidence level, while the response rate of the rating survey is 65%.


Points to note:
[1] The address of the "HKU POP SITE" is http://hkupop.pori.hk, journalists can check out the details of the survey there.
[2] The sample size of the first stage naming survey is 1,021 successful interviews, not 1,021 x 65.5% response rate, while that of the second stage rating survey is 1,024 successful interviews, not 1,024 x 65.2% response rate.
[3] The maximum sampling errors of various ratings are not more than +/-2.5. "95% confidence level" means that if we were to repeat a certain survey 100 times, using the same questions each time but with different random samples, we would expect 95 times getting a figure within the error margins specified. When quoting these figures, journalists can state "sampling errors of various ratings not more than +/-2.5, at 95% confidence level".
[4] Because of sampling errors in conducting the survey(s) and the rounding procedures in processing the data, the figures cannot be too precise, and the totals may not be completely accurate. Therefore, when quoting percentages of the survey(s), journalists should refrain from reporting decimal places, but when quoting the rating figures, one decimal place can be used.
[5] The data of this survey is collected by means of random telephone interviews conducted by real interviewers, not by any interactive voice system (IVS). If a research organization uses "computerized random telephone survey" to camouflage its IVS operation, it should be considered unprofessional.



Latest Figures

POP today releases on schedule via the "POP SITE" the latest popularity figures of the top ten Legislative Councillors. From 2014, POP enhanced the previous simple weighting method based on age and gender distribution to "rim weighting" based on age, gender and education (highest level attended) distribution. The latest figures released today have been rim-weighted according to provisional figures obtained from the Census and Statistics Department regarding the gender-age distribution of the Hong Kong population in 2014 mid-year and the educational attainment (highest level attended) distribution collected in the 2011 Census. Herewith the contact information of various surveys:

 

Date of survey

Overall sample size

Response rate

Maximum sampling error of percentages/ratings [6]

2-8/1/2015 (First stage naming survey)

1,021

65.5%

+/-3%

19-21/1/2015 (Second stage rating survey)

1,024

65.2%

+/-2.5

[6] Errors are calculated at 95% confidence level using full sample size. "95% confidence level" means that if we were to repeat a certain survey 100 times, using the same questions each time but with different random samples, we would expect 95 times getting a figure within the error margins specified.


The research design of our "Top 10 Legislative Councillors" has been explained in detail under "Survey Method" in our corresponding web page. The top councillors listed in our latest survey were all those who obtained the highest unprompted mentions in our first stage naming survey conducted from January 2 to 8. In that survey, respondents could name, unaided, up to 10 legislators whom they knew best. As a result, Leung Kwok-hung, Emily Lau, Alan Leong, Wong Yuk-man and Jasper Tsang were mentioned most frequently. Please refer to the relevant table for the rest of the list. Those 12 who were named most frequently then entered into the second stage rating survey. During the second stage rating survey conducted from January 19 to 21, respondents were asked to rate each legislator in turn using a 0-100 scale. 0 indicates absolutely no support, 100 indicates absolute support, and 50 means half-half. After calculation, the bottom 2 legislators in terms of recognition rate were dropped; the remaining 10 were then ranked according to their support ratings attained to become the top 10 Legislative Councillors. For easy reference, the POP Site has already displayed the results of all naming surveys conducted since the year 1998. Recent ratings of top 10 Legislative Councillors are summarized below:

 

Date of survey

16-19/1/14

14-17/4/14

14-17/7/14

13-16/10/14

19-21/1/15

Latest Change

Sample base[7]

545-655

562-666

615-664

572-624

546-644

--

Overall response rate

68.7%

67.1%

68.5%

65.9%

65.2%

--

Finding

Finding

Finding

Finding

Finding

Finding & error [7]

--

Jasper Tsang

59.4{1}

58.1{1}

59.5{1}

58.5{1}

62.0+/-1.7{1}

+3.5[8]

Regina Ip

52.7{2}[8]

51.8{2}

52.3{2}

44.6{4}[8]

46.3+/-2.2{2}

+1.7

Tam Yiu-chung

47.9[9]

45.3{7}[8]

44.8{6}

43.4[9]

44.1+/-2.2{3}

+0.7

Alan Leong

--

49.7{4}

51.4{3}

44.8{3}[8]

42.4+/-2.5{4}

-2.4

Emily Lau

47.4{7}

46.6{5}

48.6{4}[8]

43.3{6}[8] [10]

40.4+/-2.2{5}

-2.9[8]

Albert Ho

48.1{5}[8]

39.0{8}[8]

42.7{7}[8]

40.0{7}[8]

39.2+/-2.1{6}

-0.8

Lee Cheuk-yan

48.0{6}

45.7{6}[8]

46.6{5}

43.3{5}[8] [10]

39.1+/-2.3{7}

-4.2[8]

Leung Kwok-hung

34.4{9}

35.7{9}

37.9{8}

39.9{8}

37.2+/-2.5{8}

-2.7[8]

Albert Chan

38.8{8}

37.6[9]

36.5{9}

36.5{9}

34.4+/-2.4{9}

-2.1

Wong Yuk-man

34.0{10}

35.4{10}

35.4{10}

34.3{10}

32.8+/-2.4{10}

-1.5

Starry Lee

--

--

--

--

42.9+/-2.4[9]

--

Chiang Lai-wan

--

--

37.0[9]

--

33.8+/-2.3[9]

--

James To

52.4[9]

--

--

50.1{2}

--

--

Cyd Ho

--

49.2[9]

--

45.9[9]

--

--

Chan Chi-chuen

--

--

40.5[9]

--

--

--

James Tien

52.2{4}

50.9{3}

--

--

--

--

Michael Tien

52.6{3}

--

--

--

--

--

[7] All error figures in the table are calculated at 95% confidence level. "95% confidence level" means that if we were to repeat a certain survey 100 times, using the same questions each time but with different random samples, we would expect 95 times getting a figure within the error margins specified. Media can state "sampling error of various ratings not more than +/-2.5 at 95% confidence level" when quoting the above figures. Numbers in square brackets { } indicates rankings. The error margin of previous survey can be found at the POP Site. Starting from 2011, these questions only use sub-samples of the tracking surveys concerned, with variable sub-sample size for each question. In latest survey, the sub-sample size of the questions varies between 546 and 644, and its effect has already been reflected in the sampling errors.
[8] Such changes have gone beyond the sampling errors at the 95% confidence level under the same weighting method, meaning that they are statistically significant prima facie. However, whether numerical differences are statistically significant or not is not the same as whether they are practically useful or meaningful.
[9] Ratings with recognition rates not reaching top 10 in either stage of survey are not counted.
[10] In two decimal places, the rating of Lee Cheuk-yan is 43.28 and that of Emily Lau is 43.26.

 

The latest survey showed that Jasper Tsang was the most popularly supported councillor attaining 62.0 marks. Regina Ip, Tam Yiu-chung, Alan Leong and Emily Lau ranked the 2nd and 5th with 46.3, 44.1, 42.4 and 40.4 marks correspondingly. The 6th to 8th ranks went to Albert Ho, Lee Cheuk-yan, and Leung Kwok-hung who attained 39.2, 39.1 and 37.2 marks respectively. Albert Chan and Wong Yuk-man ranked the 9th to 10th, attaining 34.4 and 32.8 marks respectively. The mean score obtained by the top 5 councillors was 47.0 marks, while that for the top 10 was 41.8 marks. For this latest survey, Starry Lee and Chiang Lai-wan obtained support ratings of 42.9 and 33.8 marks respectively, but they were dropped due to their relatively low recognition rates. The overall ratings ranked according to results obtained over the past 12 calendar months are tabulated as follows:

 

Date of survey

14-17/4/14

14-17/7/14

13-16/10/14

19-21/1/15

No. of times on top 10

Average rating [11]

Overall ranking [12]

Jasper Tsang

58.1

59.5

58.5

62.0

4

59.5

1

Regina Ip

51.8

52.3

44.6

46.3

4

48.7

2

Alan Leong

49.7

51.4

44.8

42.4

4

47.1

3

Emily Lau

46.6

48.6

43.3

40.4

4

44.7

4

Lee Cheuk-yan

45.7

46.6

43.3

39.1

4

43.7

5

Albert Ho

39.0

42.7

40.0

39.2

4

40.2

6

Leung Kwok-hung

35.7

37.9

39.9

37.2

4

37.7

7

Wong Yuk-man

35.4

35.4

34.3

32.8

4

34.5

8

Tam Yiu-chung

45.3

44.8

--

44.1

3

44.7

9

Albert Chan

--

36.5

36.5

34.4

3

35.8

10

James Tien

50.9

--

--

--

1

50.9

11

James To

--

--

50.1

--

1

50.1

12

[11] "Average rating" is the average of all ratings obtained by Legislative Councillors over the past 12 months.
[12] "Overall ranking" is first determined by their number of times on top 10, and then their average ratings.

 

The overall rankings in the past 12 months showed that 8 Legislative Councillors have been on the list for four times. They are Jasper Tsang at the top rank achieving an average rating of 59.5 marks, Regina Ip, Alan Leong, Emily Lau, Lee Cheuk-yan, Albert Ho, Leung Kwok-hung and Wong Yuk-man who ranked the 2nd to 8th and attained 48.7, 47.1, 44.7, 43.7, 40.2, 37.7 and 34.5 marks correspondingly. Tam Yiu-chung and Albert Chan have been on the list for three times and ranked the 9th and 10th, with 44.7 and 35.8 marks correspondingly. James Tien and James To have been on the list once and ranked the 11th and 12th, with 50.9 and 50.1 marks correspondingly.


Opinion Daily

In January 2007, POP opened a feature page called "Opinion Daily" at the "POP Site", to record significant events and selected polling figures on a day-to-day basis, in order to let readers judge by themselves the reasons for the ups and downs of different opinion figures. In July 2007, POP collaborated with Wisers Information Limited whereby Wisers supplies to POP each day starting from July 24, a record of significant events of that day, according to the research method designed by POP. These daily entries would be uploaded to "Opinion Daily" as soon as they are verified by POP.

 

For the polling items covered in this press release, the previous survey was conducted from October 13 to 16, 2014, while this survey was conducted from January 19 to 21, 2015. In between these two surveys, herewith the significant events selected from counting newspaper headlines and commentaries on a daily basis and covered by at least 25% of the local newspaper articles. Readers can make their own judgment if these significant events have any impacts to different polling figures.

 

13/1/15

CY Leung will soon deliver the 2015 Policy Address.

7/1/15

Government starts the second consultation on political reform.

6/1/15

Government submits sentiment report.

5/1/15

Police contacts Occupy Movement key figures to assist in investigation.

10/12/14

Police starts clearance in Admiralty.

2/12/14

The Occupy Central trio announces they will turn themselves to the police and urge protesters on the streets to retreat.

25/11/14

Police starts clearance in Mong Kok.

19/11/14

Protesters charge the Legislative Council building.

26/10/14

Vote in occupied areas is cancelled, protest leaders apologise.

21/10/14

The government and Hong Kong Federation of Students start the first dialogue but both parties have not reached a consensus at the moment.



Commentary

Robert Ting-Yiu Chung, Director of Public Opinion Programme, observed, "The latest survey of top 10 Legislative Councillors shows that compared to three months ago, in terms of familiarity, James To who ranked second last time has dropped out of the 'top 10' list and replaced by Tam Yiu-chung. In terms of absolute ratings, the scores of 7 out of the 9 who stayed on the list have gone down, 2 have gone up. Among them, the rise in rating of Jasper Tsang and drops in ratings of Emily Lau, Lee Cheuk-yan and Leung Kwok-hung all go beyond sampling errors. That of Jasper Tsang has climbed to his own record high since he first appeared on the list in 1997, while those of Alan Leong, Emily Lau and Lee Cheuk-yan have again dropped to their new lows since 2006, 1994 and 1995. In terms of relative rankings, Jasper Tsang continues to top the list, now for 8 consecutive times since April 2013. Regina Ip goes up two positions to rank second. Tam Yiu-chung re-enters the list to rank third. Alan Leong goes down one position to rank fourth, Emily Lau and Albert Ho both go up one place to rank fifth and sixth respectively, while Lee Cheuk-yan goes down two places to rank seventh. Leung Kwok-hung, Albert Chan and Wong Yuk-man remain at the eighth to tenth positions unchanged. Three months ago, according to our survey, councillors from all camps were losers of the mass movement. Our latest survey shows that the popularity of pro-establishment councillors seems to be recovering, while that of pan-democratic councillors is still going down. However, other than President Jasper Tsang, the popularity ratings of all councillors on the list fall below 50, meaning that Legco is still weak in popularity. It should be noted that our list of 'top 10' only includes Legco members who are best known to the public, ranked according to their support ratings. Some of the other 60 councillors may well have very high or low support ratings, but because they are not the most well-known councillors, they do not appear on the 'top 10' list by design. We leave it for our readers to figure out the reasons for the ups and downs of these popularity ratings using detailed records shown in our 'Opinion Daily' feature page."



Future Release (Tentative)

  • February 10, 2015 (Tuesday) 1pm to 2pm: Popularity of CE and Principal Officials


| Special Announcements | Abstract | Latest Figures | Opinion Daily | Commentary | Future Release (Tentative) |
| Detailed Findings (Rating of Top Ten Legislative Councillors) |