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 Elections designed to give the party-state greater legitimacy  Party controls elections to prevent dissent  Direct, secret-ballot elections at local.

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Presentation on theme: " Elections designed to give the party-state greater legitimacy  Party controls elections to prevent dissent  Direct, secret-ballot elections at local."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Elections designed to give the party-state greater legitimacy  Party controls elections to prevent dissent  Direct, secret-ballot elections at local level  Found most common at the village level (could be a façade)  Indirect elections at other levels

3  CCP allows the existence of eight "democratic" parties. › China Democratic League-intellectuals › Chinese Party for the Public Interest-overseas experts  Membership is small and has very little power  Important advisory role to the party leaders and generate support for CCP policies › Meet at CPPCC during National People’s Congress (and attend NPC as nonvoting deputies)

4 CCP CHINESE GOVERNMENT PLA PARALLEL HIERARCHY  Three parallel hierarchies  Principle of dual role  China's policy making is governed more directly by factions and personal relationships (guanxi)

5  Organized hierarchically by levels  The party has a separate constitution from the government's constitution of 1982, and its central bodies are:  National Party Congress  Central Committee  Politburo/Standing Committee

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8  Three branches - a legislature, an executive, and a judiciary.  People's National Congress  The National People's Congress choose the President and Vice President of China, but there is only one party-sponsored candidate for each position Executive/Bureaucracy  The President and Vice President  The Premier  Bureaucracy

9  Chinese for patron-client relationships  Think nomenclatura in the CCP  Helps to build contacts and power  Can determine Politburo membership among other things

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12 STATE COUNCIL LOCAL CCP NATIONAL PARTY CONGRESS Meets every 5 years for a week 2,100 NATIONAL PARTY CONGRESS Meets every 5 years for a week 2,100 PROVINCIAL CCP NATIONAL PEOPLES CONGRESS Meets Yearly for 2 weeks 3,000+ 73% CCP 5 years NATIONAL PEOPLES CONGRESS Meets Yearly for 2 weeks 3,000+ 73% CCP 5 years LOCAL GOV. PROVINCIAL GOV. PRESIDENT PREMIER  Head of State  Elected by NPC (One candidate selected by CCP)  5 year term, 2 term limit  Traditionally the General Sec.  Premier = PM  Head of government  Member of the Standing Committee  State Council = Cabinet  Authority over Bureaucracy (40m cadres)  2 term limit THE GOV PARTY >

13  President and Premier (Prime Minister) › President is head of state with little constitutional power, but is sometimes the General Secretary of CCP › Prime Minister is head of State Council, or ministers, and is in charge of “departments” of government

14  They are elected for 5-year terms by National Peoples Congress, nominated by CCP’s National Party Congress  They also serve on Central Military Commission, which oversees the PLA  The CCP’s leader is the general secretary and he is in charge of bureaucracy, or Secretariat

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16  Think of Russian Matrioshka dolls  Top legislative body is National Peoples Congress  3,000 members chosen by provincial peoples congresses across the country  They meet in Beijing once a year for a couple of weeks to “legislate” for 1 billion+ people  Pass laws; amend Constitution,  On paper very powerful, but checked by Party

17  The National Peoples Congress chooses a Central Committee of 200 that meets every 2 months to conduct business  Inside this is the Central Committee’s Standing Committee which functions every day

18  Parallel structure  The National Party Congress is main representative body of CCP, not people › Has 2,000 delegates › Select 150-200 people chosen for Central Committee › It chooses a Politburo of 12 people to run party’s day to day business › Many of these people work in Secretariat so Politburo chooses a Standing Committee of 6 headed by General Secretary (Thus merging executive to legislative)

19  Standing Committee of Politburo includes president and prime minister, plus closest associates, and the party legislative “branch” and party executive is joined with government executive

20  State Council › Government Ministers and Premier carry out the decisions made by National Peoples Congress (or Politburo) › Chinese bureaucrats are paralled by party members assigned to their ministries  Leadership small groups are informal groups that link other ministers to coordinate policymaking and implementation › In spite of centralization, provincial and local ministries have had to adapt national policies to local needs

21  China has a 4-tiered "people's court" system › Handle criminal cases and government working on civil law codes  “People's Procuratorate" › Investigates suspected illegal activity  Criminal justice is swift and harsh (capital punishment is a bullet in the back of the head)  Human Rights organizations criticize China › Not a rule of law system, rather a rule by law system

22 "Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.“ - Mao  The People's Liberation Army encompasses all of the country's ground, air, and naval armed services.  Important influence on politics and policy. The second half of Mao's famous quote above is less often quoted: "Our principle is that the party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the party." This propaganda poster represents life in the "Red Army" - the military under Mao before the People's Republic of China was formed in 1949.

23  During the 1970s and 80s the government didn’t have money to modernize Army so fended for itself  It ran hotels, construction companies, factories that produced pirate copies of everything, satellite dishes  By 1990s government began controlling the Army and its activities

24  Ministry of State Security  Combats espionage and gathers intelligence  People’s Armed Police  Guards public buildings and quell unrest  Ministry of Public Security  Maintenance of law and order, investigations, surveillance  Maintain labor reform camps  No habeas corpus rights

25  Economic reforms › Corruption › Iron rice bowl broken › High unemployment › Inequality of classes › Floating population › Environmental implications  Demand for political power and civil liberties?  Will contact through trade mean that China will become more like their trading partners?

26  Hong Kong  Special Economic Zones (SEZs).

27  USA/China relations:  no contact until early 1970s  1972 visit, Zhou Enlai, Nixon, Kissinger  Deng initiated open door policy  currently, major USA/China issues: trade imbalances, currency valuation, debt

28  China trades with Taiwan, but the PRC views Taiwan as part of China and Taiwan does not  But they want to benefit from its trade

29 Democratic reforms can be seen in these ways:  Some input from the National People's Congress is accepted by the Politburo  More emphasis is placed on laws and legal procedures  Village elections are now semi-competitive, with choices of candidates and some freedom from the party's control

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31  Xi was Chosen as General Secretary of the Communist Party of China on Nov. 15, 2012  Became President of the People's Republic of China on March 14, 2013, following his election by the National People's Congress, thus replacing his predecessor Hu Jintao.  Although the presidency is officially a ceremonial post, in recent years it has become customary for the general secretary to assume the presidency as confirmation of his rise to power.  Has adopted the theme; “Chinese Dream”

32  Tiananmen crisis, 1989: student/intellectual grief demonstration following death of Hu Yaobang  turned into democratic protest joined by hundreds of thousands  shut down by PLA, unofficial estimates of 700 to several thousand killed  pressure from international human rights organizations  suppression of Falun Gong  tenuous position of rule of law in communist societies

33  1949-1978: China followed a communist political economic model:  command economy directed by central government based on democratic centralism  replaced by Deng with socialist market economy : gradual infusion of capitalism while retaining state control  Agricultural policy:  1949 era: people’s communes: farms merged, several thousand families  one of Mao’s greatest failures  1980’s: replaced by Household Responsibility System: dismantled communes, individual families take full charge of production and marketing

34  “private business”  new category under control of the party  urban co-ops, service organizations, rural industries all acting as capitalist enterprises  private industry remains heavily regulated by the government, but  price controls lifted  private businesses far more profitable than state-owned  Township and Village Enterprises (TVEs):  rural factories and businesses, run by local government and private entrepreneurs  slowing the migration of peasants to the cities

35  ECONOMIC PROBLEMS  (a) unemployment and inequality  (b) inefficiency of the state sector  (c) pollution  (d) product safety  China’s vulnerability to world economic crisis of 2008  rapid rebound, return to growth

36 Mao: population control policies were ‘imperialist tools’ designed to weaken developing countries post-Mao: “two-child family” campaign 1979: Deng instituted “one child policy”  incentives and penalties  relaxation of policy in rural areas in 1984, reinstated in 2002  other consequences: female infanticide, gender imbalance, elder care  2013 further relaxing of one child policy


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