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Proceedings
initiated in Parliament for China’s leadership change
BEIJING—The change in the Chinese leadership for a new term of five
years was formally initiated in China’s Parliament, with a candidate
namelist tabled with the Presidium of the First Session of the 11th
National People’s Congress (NPC) Wednesday afternoon.
Entrusted by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
(CPC), Xi Jinping, member of the Standing Committee of the Political
Bureau of the CPC Central Committee, made explanations to the Presidium
on the candidates for the State organs’ top positions, including
president, top lawmaker and premier.
Chaired by Wu Bangguo, Presidium executive chairman, Wednesday’s meeting
made a decision that the candidate namelist of the NPC Stand Committee
chairperson, vice-chairpersons, secretary-general and members, as well
as president and vice-president of the People’s Republic of China (PRC)
and chairman of the Central Military Commission of the PRC, will be
presented to NPC delegations for discussion and consultation.
Xi said the namelist was proposed after a series of democratic
recommendations, consultations in and outside the Communist Party of
China. Relevant departments were also consulted on the candidates’
integrity and performance of duty.
“Electing and appointing leaders of the State for a new term is one of
the major tasks for this Session,” Xi said. “The CPC Central Committee
has set great store by recommendation of candidates for the State organ
leaders, and has made an overall consideration when arranging the
personnel reshuffle for the 17th CPC National Congress last October.”
Besides strict political and professional qualifications, the
candidates’ personal integrity were also taken into consideration.
The CPC Central Committee has maintained that “after some senior
comrades retire, the State organs should be enriched by some younger
comrades,” Xi said. They should also include women and comrades from
ethnic minority groups and other fields, he said.
The candidates should be born after 1940 in general, and the criteria
could be relaxed for certain non-Communist party leaders.
Xi extended respect to the “old comrades” who were not nominated this
time due to old age, saying that “after contributing to the great cause
of the Party and the State, reform and opening up and the socialist
modernization drive, they have made fresh contributions this time to the
leadership change.”
According to China’s Constitution, candidates for chairperson,
vice-chairpersons, secretary-general, members of the NPC Standing
Committee, candidates for president and vice-presidents of the PRC and
PRC Central Military Commission, and candidates for president of the
Supreme People’s Court and procurator-general of the Supreme People’s
Procuratorate, who were nominated by the CPC Central Committee, will be
put for vote by the plenary session of the NPC after consultation with
NPC delegations.
The NPC plenary session will decide on the choice of premier of the
State Council upon nomination by the President, and on the choice of the
vice-premiers and other cabinet members upon nomination by the Premier.
The session will also, upon nomination by the CMC chairman, decide on
the choice of all other members of the Commission.
Wu Bangguo, chairman of the 10th NPC Standing Committee, said when he
reported the work of the Standing Committee NPC deputies last week that
the NPC must conscientiously uphold the leadership of the Communist
Party of China to ensure that “the personnel recommended by Party
organizations become leaders of the organs of state power through
legally stipulated procedures.”
—Agencies |