Politics of Guangdong

Summary

The Politics of Guangdong follows a dual party-government system like the rest of China's provinces. Guangdong is known for a surge of legislative activism in recent years, often called the Guangdong Phenomenon (Guangdong Xianxiang). The Guangdong Provincial People's Congress has enacted measures to increase democracy and transparency, and exert more control over the financial sector. In a well-publicized case in 2000, the Guangdong PPC also harshly criticized the Environmental Protection Bureau for allowing the construction of an electroplating park without a proper environmental impact investigation.[1]

List of Chinese Communist Party Committee Secretaries edit

No. Party chief Term start Term end Notes
1 Ye Jianying August 1949 July 1955
2 Tao Zhu July 1955 February 1965 Purged in 1967 during Cultural Revolution
3 Zhao Ziyang February 1965 March 1967
  • Not a member of the CCP at the time
  • Premier (1983–1987)
  • General Secretary of the Communist Party (1987–1989)
4 Huang Yongsheng February 1968 November 1969
  • General; close associate of Lin Biao
  • Purged in 1972
5 Liu Xingyuan November 1969 December 1972
6 Ding Sheng December 1972 December 1973 General
7 Zhao Ziyang April 1974 October 1975 Second term
8 Wei Guoqing October 1975 December 1978 Director of the PLA's General Political Department (1977–1982)
9 Xi Zhongxun December 1978 November 1980
10 Ren Zhongyi November 1980 July 1985
11 Lin Ruo July 1985 January 1991
12 Xie Fei January 1991 March 1998
13 Li Changchun March 1998 November 2002
  • Politburo Standing Committee (2002–2012)
  • National propaganda chief
14 Zhang Dejiang November 2002 October 2007
  • Politburo Standing Committee (2012–2017)
  • Chairman of the National People's Congress (2013–2018)
15 Wang Yang October 2007 December 2012
  • Vice Premier (2013–2018)
  • Politburo Standing Committee (2017–)
  • Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (2018–)
16 Hu Chunhua December 2012 October 2017
17 Li Xi October 2017 October 2022
18 Huang Kunming October 2022 incumbent

List of governors edit

  1. Ye Jianying: November 1948 – September 1953
  2. Tao Zhu: September 1953 – August 1957
  3. Chen Yu: August 1957 – November 1967
  4. Huang Yongsheng: November 1967 – June 1969
  5. Liu Xingyuan: June 1969 – April 1972
  6. Ding Sheng: April 1972 – April 1974
  7. Zhao Ziyang: April 1974 – October 1975
  8. Wei Guoqing: October 1975 – January 1979
  9. Xi Zhongxun: (1979–1981)
  10. Liu Tianfu: (1981–1983)
  11. Liang Lingguang: (1983–1985)
  12. Ye Xuanping: (1985–1991)
  13. Zhu Senlin: (1991–1996)
  14. Lu Ruihua: (1996–2003)
  15. Huang Huahua: (2003–2011)
  16. Zhu Xiaodan: (2011–2016)
  17. Ma Xingrui: (2016–2021)[2]
  18. Wang Weizhong: (2021–present)[3]

List of chairmen of Guangdong People's Congress edit

  1. Li Jianzhen (李坚真): 1979–1983
  2. Luo Tian (罗天): 1983–1990
  3. Lin Ruo (林若): 1990–1996
  4. Zhu Senlin (朱森林): 1996–2001
  5. Zhang Guoying (张帼英): 2001–2003
  6. Lu Zhonghe (卢钟鹤): 2003–2005
  7. Huang Liman (黄丽满): 2005 – January 2008
  8. Ou Guangyuan (欧广源): January 2008 – January 2013
  9. Huang Longyun (黄龙云): January 2013 – January 2017
  10. Li Yumei (李玉妹): January 2017- January 2022
  11. Huang Chuping(黄楚平): January 2022 – present

Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference edit

  1. Tao Zhu (陶铸): 1955–1960 
  2. Ou Mengjue (区梦觉): 1960–1967 
  3. Wang Shoudao (王首道): 1977–1979 
  4. Yin Linping (尹林平): 1979–1983 
  5. Liang Weilin (梁威林): 1983–1985
  6. Wu Nansheng (吴南生): 1985–1993 
  7. Guo Rongchang (郭荣昌): 1993–2003 
  8. Liu Fengyi (刘凤仪): 2003 
  9. Chen Shaoji (陈绍基): 2004 – April 2009
  10. Huang Longyun: 2009–2013
  11. Zhu Mingguo: 2013–2014
  12. Wang Rong: 2015–present

National Supervisory Commission edit

  1. Shi Kehui (施克辉): 2018–2021
  2. Song Fulong (宋福龙): 2021–present

References edit

  1. ^ Yang, Dali (2004). Remaking the Chinese Leviathan: Market Transition and the Politics of Governance in China. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. pp. 273–274. ISBN 0-8047-5493-4.
  2. ^ Ni, Vincent (2021-12-26). "China replaces Xinjiang party boss associated with Uyghur crackdown". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2021-12-26.
  3. ^ Yi Yi (伊一) (27 December 2021). 王伟中代理广东省省长 马兴瑞辞去省长职务. ce.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 28 December 2021.