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Jiangsu Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party 中国共产党江苏省委员会 | |
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Overview | |
Type | Highest decision-making organ when Jiangsu Provincial Congress is not in session. |
Elected by | Jiangsu Provincial Congress |
Length of term | Five years |
Term limits | None |
First convocation | June 1927 |
Leadership | |
Secretary | Xin Changxing |
Deputy Secretary | Xu Kunlin (Governor) Shen Ying (Full-time Deputy Secretary) |
Secretary-General | Chu Yonghong |
Executive organ | Standing Committee |
Inspection organ | Commission for Discipline Inspection |
The Jiangsu Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party is the provincial committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in Jiangsu Province. The CCP committee secretary is the highest ranking post in the province. The current secretary is Xin Changxing, who succeeded Wu Zhenglong on 3 January 2023.
In early 1927, Congress of the Jiangsu and Zhejiang Districts was held, and the CCP established the Jiangsu District Committee of the CCP. In early June 1927, the District Committee was abolished and replaced with the Jiangsu Provincial Committee. On 2 July 1927, the committee faced heavy losses due to betrayal, leading to its abolition and the establishment of the Jiangsu Provisional Provincial Committee in its place. From 11 to 26 November 1929, the Second Jiangsu Provincial Congress secretly held in Shanghai, and the Jiangsu Provincial Committee was restructured to the Jiangnan Provincial Committee in early October 1930. In January 1931, the Jiangsu Provincial Committee was reestablished. However, due to repeated arrests, the provincial committee was forced to cease activities in early January 1935.[1]
In early November 1937, the Jiangsu Provincial Committee was reestablished in Shanghai with Liu Xiao as its secretary. In early 1938, the Provincial Committee established an Outer County Working Committee in Pudong to organize anti-Japanese forces.[2] On 13 January 1943, the CCP Secretariat decided to abolish the provincial committee and establish an enemy area work department in the Central China Bureau in its place.[3] After the proclamation of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949, the Jiangsu Province was divided into south Jiangsu and north Jiangsu administrative regions. After the administrative regions were abolished in 1952, Jiangsu Provincial Committee was reestablished in November 1952, becoming the highest political force of the province.[4]
In January 1967, during the Cultural Revolution, the provincial committee was overthrown. In March 1967, the central government decided to establish military rule in the province, and a revolutionary committee was established in March 1968. In December 1970, the Jiangsu Provincial Committee was reestablished and reorganized to work along with the revolutionary committee. The two institutions began to separate in November 1974.[5]
The organization of the Jiangsu Provincial Committee includes:[6]
Secretary of the Jiangsu Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party | |
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中国共产党江苏省委员会书记 | |
since 3 January 2023 | |
Jiangsu Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party | |
Type | Party Committee Secretary |
Status | Provincial level official |
Member of | Jiangsu Provincial Standing Committee |
Nominator | Central Committee |
Appointer | Jiangsu Provincial Committee Central Committee |
Inaugural holder | Ke Qingshi |
Formation | November 1952 |
Deputy | Deputy Secretary Secretary-General |
No. | Image | Name | Term start | Term end | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ke Qingshi
(1902–1965) |
November 1952 | August 1954 | [citation needed] | |
2 | Jiang Weiqing
(1910–2000) |
August 1954 | 1967 | [citation needed] | |
Cultural Revolution Interregnum | 1967 | 1970 | |||
3 | Xu Shiyou
(1906–1985) |
December 1970 | January 1974 | [citation needed] | |
4 | Peng Chong
(1915–2010) |
January 1974 | February 1977 | [citation needed] | |
5 | Xu Jiatun
(1916–2016) |
February 1977 | April 1983 | [citation needed] | |
6 | Han Peixin
(1921–2017) |
April 1983 | December 1989 | [citation needed] | |
7 | Shen Daren
(1928–2017) |
December 1989 | September 1993 | [citation needed] | |
8 | Chen Huanyou
(born 1934) |
September 1993 | December 1999 | [citation needed] | |
9 | Hui Liangyu
(born 1944) |
December 1999 | December 2002 | [7] | |
10 | Li Yuanchao
(born 1950) |
December 2002 | October 2007 | [8][9] | |
11 | Liang Baohua
(born 1945) |
October 2007 | 6 December 2010 | [10] | |
12 | Luo Zhijun
(born 1951) |
6 December 2010 | 30 June 2016 | [11] | |
13 | Li Qiang
(born 1959) |
30 June 2016 | 29 October 2017 | [12] | |
14 | Lou Qinjian
(born 1956) |
29 October 2017 | 19 October 2021 | [13] | |
15 | Wu Zhenglong
(born 1964) |
19 October 2021 | 28 December 2022 | [14] | |
16 | Xin Changxing
(born 1963) |
3 January 2023 | Incumbent | [15] |
14th Provincial Party Committee (November 2016 – November 2021)
15th Provincial Party Committee (November 2021–)