The resounding victory for pro-democratic parties in Hong Kong’s district council elections may have only limited practical implications for the city’s overall government, but the message it sends Beijing is a powerful one.

The 388 new “pan-dem” district councillors (those from the city’s broad anti-Beijing camp known as the pan-democracy group) will mostly be dealing day to day with local matters like transport and bin collection.

The councils are also responsible for putting forward 117 of the 1,200-strong electoral college that will decide the next chief executive. But the system is otherwise so skewed towards the pro-Beijing establishment that even if they had won every seat in Sunday’s vote, it would have made little difference.

The bigger significance of the result is in its symbolic value, says Dr Mareike Ohlberg, research associate at the Mercator Institute for China Studies in Berlin.

With the pan-dems winning 90 per cent of seats on a record 71 per cent turnout – double that of the local elections four years ago – the results conclusively “refute one of the main points that the party-state has been pushing, which is that the silent majority opposes the protests”, Dr Ohlberg told The Independent.

Beijing has been pushing this line so hard that the party leadership might have started to believe it themselves, she suggests, with Chinese media clearly caught on the back foot by the results and showing little to no coverage of the issue on Monday. “The most interesting part is that the Communist Party had not prepared a spin for this kind of outcome, showing they are disconnected from the realities on the ground in Hong Kong,” she said.

China, put on the defensive, will instinctively see the result as a threat, says Professor Steve Tsang, director of the Soas China Institute in London.

“By any measure this has been a tremendous success as a democratic exercise. But from Beijing’s perspective, it shows Hong Kong is unruly and dangerous, because its democracy cannot be relied on,” he said. “The Chinese definition of a dependable democracy is one that will do exactly what Beijing wants. And this one doesn’t.”

There may still be a way to a peaceful compromise, however, if chief executive Carrie Lam can use what little agency she has left to reach out to protesters and offer a judge-led commission of inquiry into the last six months of crisis. This, coupled with a promise not to prosecute protesters until it was complete, could meet almost all the movement’s remaining demands in one go.

It would require an about-turn from Ms Lam – she has, after withdrawing her hated extradition bill, insisted she will give no more concessions. But the election result gives her a chance to, in her own words, “seriously reflect” on that position.

Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Show all 24 1 /24 Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Police in riot gear move through a cloud of smoke as they detain a protester at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University AP Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban A protester takes cover under an umbrella Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban A protestor reacts to police officers EPA Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Pro-democracy protesters react after the police fired tear gas outside the Hong Kong Polytechnic University EPA Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban A pro-democracy protester holds a placard EPA Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Protesters react as police fire tear gas AFP via Getty Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban An anti-government protester is silhouetted during protests Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Tear gas engulf umbrellas Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban A protester lowers himself down a rope from a bridge to a highway, to escape AFP via Getty Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban People form a human chain to pass materials as they gather for a march towards Hong Kong Polytechnic University AFP via Getty Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Protesters are seen after leaving the campus of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Pro-democracy protesters during clashes with police outside the Hong Kong Polytechnic University EPA Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Police spray blue-dyed liquid AP Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Protesters are sprayed with blue liquid from water cannon during clashes with police outside Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) in Hong Kong, China, November 17, 2019. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu TYRONE SIU Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Police officers detain a protester AP Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban An injured protester is evacuated by ambulance EPA Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Injured people are taken away after clashes Getty Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban A protester throws back a tear gas canister fired by police at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hong Kong on November 17, 2019. - Hong Kong police fired tear gas on November 17 morning at protesters intent on keeping their stranglehold on a major tunnel as pro-democracy activists vowed to "squeeze the economy" into next week. (Photo by Ye Aung Thu / AFP) (Photo by YE AUNG THU/AFP via Getty Images) YE AUNG THU AFP via Getty Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Police arrest anti-government protesters Getty Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban A protester's umbrella is seen on fire during clashes with police outside Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) in Hong Kong, China November 17, 2019. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha ATHIT PERAWONGMETHA Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Medical staff carry a protester out of the campus of Hong Kong Polytechnic University Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Protesters try to extinguish a tear gas canister Reuters Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban Protesters take a rope down from a bridge to a highway, to escape from Hong Kong Polytechnic University campus AFP via Getty Hong Kong protests: Latest after court strikes down face mask ban A protestor gestures during a confrontation with police AP

The election, both in its result and the way it was conducted, sent “a very clear message to the government [from the people]: that we are reasonable, we are responsible, and you have another chance to listen to us,” said Professor Tsang.

And if Ms Lam can find a route to a settlement, it is just possible Beijing will tolerate one more compromise. “Because at the end of the day,” Professor Tsang argues, “Beijing does not want to destroy Hong Kong.”

For the protest movement, which has developed a stubborn hardcore in recent weeks who may continue pushing for direct action, the result is a moment for celebration – but also its own reflection.