Dominic Lee Tsz-king (; born 22 January 1984) is a Hong Kong politician. He is a member of the New People's Party and a Legislative Council Member representing the New Territories North East. He is a former member of the Sham Shui Po District Council for Yau Yat Tsuen from 2015 to 2019 and the former chairman of the Liberal Party Youth Committee.
Dominic Lee Tsz-king was born in Hong Kong on 22 January 1984 to an upper-middle-class family. He studied at Diocesan Boys' School and the Li Po Chun United World College of Hong Kong before going abroad and graduated from Rice University in 2006 with a degree in economics. He worked as an assistant in his campus polling station for Democratic Party US presidential candidate John Kerry in 2004 and later worked as an intern for Democrat Al Green in the US House of Representatives.
Lee joined the pro-business conservative Liberal Party in 2009 after he returned to Hong Kong. During the 2004 Hong Kong legislative election, he helped Liberal Party chairman James Tien to win a seat representing New Territories East. Lee became the first chairman of the party's youth committee when it was established in 2011.
In the 2011 District Council elections, Lee ran in Shek Lei Extension but was defeated by Democratic Party incumbent Leung Kwok-wah. In the 2015 District Council elections, Lee ran in the Yau Yat Tsuen constituency and won against League of Social Democrats candidate Dickson Chau Ka-faat, succeeding council chairman Jimmy Kwok Chun-wah as member of the Sham Shui Po District Council.
In 2016, Lee was nominated by the Liberal Party to run in the 2016 Hong Kong legislative election in New Territories East with the support of incumbent legislator and party honorary chairman James Tien. However, the Liberal party ticket narrowly missed out on winning the seat. In the 2019 District Council elections, Lee narrowly lost his District Council seat in Yau Yat Tsuen to independent barrister Lau Wai-chung by 96 votes.
Lee is known for his strong words in opposition to universal retirement protection. In 2014, he was criticized by an elderly woman over the topic during a legislative council public hearing, which went viral on the Internet.
In 2015, Lee supported the government's plan to scrap visa-free facility for Indians, defending the move as a "sacrifice to protect our borders". In 2016, he led the Alliance Demanding Repatriation of Refugees against "fake" refugees from Southeast Asia coming into Hong Kong. Moreover, he demanded quitting the United Nations Convention against Torture to block "fake" refugees from coming to Hong Kong. In May that year, he led an anti-refugee protest which drew 100 to 200 people as well as counter-protesters. Claiming that there was a refugee-led crime surge in Hong Kong and that South Asians should be locked up in internment camps, Access to Information requests from Justice Centre Hong Kong have debunked these fears as not being based upon any measurable increase in crime.
In April 2016, Lee led a protest in Lan Kwai Fong against the Equal Opportunities Commission's ruling of "ladies' night" being discriminatory. Lee supported bar and nightclub operators in favor of resuming ladies' night to avoid potential losses of revenue.
In 2018, Lee claimed that civil unions and gay marriage will âÂÂencourageâ people to adopt LGBTQ lifestyles in response to Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal's ruling which stated that spousal visas may be granted to same-sex couples in civil unions.
While an active member of the Liberal Party, Lee ran for the 2020 primary of the New People's Party for the Legislative Council election in the New Territories East constituency. As a result, his membership with the Liberal Party was revoked by party leader Felix Chung. Later that night, Lee announced his resignation as the member of Liberal Party and joined New People's Party and Civil Force, a district-based political coalition that was established in 2014 by Chairperson of the New People's Party, Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee.
In the 2021 Hong Kong legislative election, Lee was elected to the Legislative Council representing New Territories North East (2021 constituency) with 45.35 percent of the vote. Lee is one among five members of the New People's Party to be elected to the Legislative Council and will serve a four-year term.
In March 2021, after some companies boycotted purchasing cotton from Xinjiang due to suspected human rights violations, Lee said that some leaders of Western countries and Western media had falsely understood the situation in Xinjiang and have leveled allegations without evidence.
In April 2023, a survey of more than 1000 Hongkongers showed that only 4% of respondents recognized Lee as a lawmaker.
In April 2024, Lee criticized former Chief Executive Carrie Lam's office space, saying "Why does a former chief executive need to rent such space?"
Lee attacked the United States and Israel over the Gaza war, upheld the 2020 Hong Kong national security law, and morally challenged the United Kingdom and NATO in a speech to the 61st session of the United Nations Human Rights Council on 18 March 2026, which became a viral video. According to a Hong Kong Free Press article, he was praised on social media for speaking against war, but the article pointed out his inconsistent positions on refugees, lack of previous support for Palestine, and misinformation. Lee claimed the UK "arrested over 12,000 of its own people for posting online" and that tourism in Hong Kong has "flourished" since the implementing of the security law.
Part of the pro-Beijing camp, Lee is vocal about his conservative stances on the economy, immigration, and social issues.