The political ranking of the People's Republic of China is the ranking of political leaders in China, by order of presumed political power. Although there is no formally published ranking, there is usually an established convention and protocol, and the relative positions of Chinese political figures can usually be deduced from the order in meetings and especially by the time and order which figures are covered by the official media. Depending on the person and the time period, the hierarchy will vary accordingly. Although Chinese political positions are becoming increasingly institutionalized, part of the power of Chinese leaders still derives from who they are, rather than what position they hold. The informal role as Party "center" (formerly the position of paramount leader) is an example of the continuing importance of non-institutionalized and informal practices of power. Individuals can hold multiple top leadership titles but also be unable to claim to be the de facto ruler as was the case with Hua Guofeng, when "paramount leader" Deng Xiaoping was present. The traditional ranking system was based upon the hierarchical line of the politburo standing committee; however, "special" cases do arise as it is the case with Jiang Zemin and the 4th Generation leaders. Jiang, although retired from the politburo and the central committee, was nonetheless ranked number two for being the all powerful CMC chairman until his resignation on September 19, 2004. [edit] Party and State leaders By convention, persons holding positions of the Vice-Chairs of the NPC or above are referred to "Party and State leaders" (党和国家领导人) in the official media. A typical ranking is as follows: [edit] Order of Precedence Official state media, when reporting news pieces, adhere to strict ranking protocol when the news involves multiple top leaders. As a result, the news overlooks the actual importance of the story attached to each leader, rather the news order is determined by political ranking alone. For example, if the Premier was on a relief visit to a region damaged by an earthquake, and the Chairman of the National People's Congress happened to be chairing a regular NPC meeting, the NPC chair would always have his news item placed before that of the Premier. The order of precedence is strictly adhered to when seating leaders at official meetings and functions. The current order of precedence is as follows (bolded members of first section are current members of the Politburo Standing Committee): [edit] Current Politburo Standing Committee - Hu Jintao, General Secretary of CPC, President of PRC, Chairman of the CMC
- Wu Bangguo, Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress
- Wen Jiabao, Premier of the state council
- Jia Qinglin, Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
- Li Changchun, Media and Communications head
- Xi Jinping, Vice-President of PRC
- Li Keqiang, Vice-Premier of the state council
- He Guoqiang, Secretary of Central Commission for Discipline Inspection
- Zhou Yongkang, Political and Legislative Affairs Committee secretary
[edit] Other Members of the CCP Politburo - In order of surname strokes
- Xi Jinping, Vice-President of the People's Republic of China, top-ranked member of CPC Secretariat, in charge of Hong Kong and Macau Affairs
- Wang Gang, Vice-Chair of CPPCC
- Wang Lequan, Party chief of Xinjiang Autonomous Region
- Wang Zhaoguo, Vice-Chairman of National People's Congress
- Wang Qishan, Vice-Premier
- Hui Liangyu, Vice-Premier
- Liu Qi, Party chief of Beijing, head of Beijing Olympics organizing committee
- Liu Yunshan, Media and Communications minister, Secretary in CPC Central Secretariat
- Liu Yandong, State Councilors
- Li Changchun, propaganda chief
- Li Keqiang, Executive Vice-Premier
- Li Yuanchao, CPC Organization Department head
- Wu Bangguo, Chairman of the National People's Congress Standing Committee
- Wang Yang, Party chief of Guangdong
- Zhang Gaoli, Party chief of Tianjin
- Zhang Dejiang, Vice-Premier
- Zhou Yongkang, Head of the Political and Legislative Affairs Committee
- Hu Jintao, General Secretary, President, Central Military Commission Chairman
- Yu Zhengsheng, Party chief of Shanghai
- He Guoqiang, Head of Central Commission for Discipline Inspection
- Jia Qinglin, head of the People's Political Consultative Conference
- Xu Caihou, Vice-Chairman of Central Military Commission
- Guo Boxiong, Executive Vice-Chairman of Central Military Commission
- Wen Jiabao, Premier
- Bo Xilai, Party chief of Chongqing
[edit] Former leaders from the Politburo Standing Committee or equivalent in order of seniority at the time they were in office - Jiang Zemin, Former General Secretary (Generally, Jiang appears at events ranked second overall, immediately following Hu Jintao and preceding Wu Bangguo.)
- Li Peng, Former Premier and NPC Chairman
- Wan Li, Former NPC Chairman
- Qiao Shi, Former NPC Chairman
- Zhu Rongji, Former Premier
- Li Ruihuan, Former CPPCC Chairman
- Song Ping, Former head of the CPC Organization Department
- Liu Huaqing, Former Vice Chairman of the CMC
- Wei Jianxing, Former head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection
- Li Lanqing, Former Executive Vice-Premier
- Zeng Qinghong, Former Vice-President
- Wu Guanzheng, Former head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection
- Luo Gan, Former Political and Legislative Affairs Committee secretary
[edit] Members of the Secretariat of the Communist Party of China - Heads of Ministries and Government agencies under the State Council (in following order)
[edit] Provincial party secretaries/Governors - (Follows a traditional order for provinces; this order is the convention on all national and provincial maps)
- Beijing Municipality (Party Chief Liu Qi [previously mentioned], Mayor Guo Jinlong)
- Tianjin Municipality (Party Chief Zhang Gaoli [previously mentioned], Mayor Huang Xingguo)
- Hebei (Party Chief Zhang Yunchuan, Governor Hu Chunhua)
- Shanxi (Party Chief Zhang Baoshun, Governor Wang Jun)
- Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (Party Chief Chu Bo, Chairman Bagatur)
- Liaoning (Party Chief Zhang Wenyue, Governor Chen Zhenggao)
- Jilin (Party Chief Wang Min, Governor Han Changfu)
- Heilongjiang (Party Chief Ji Bingxuan, Governor Li Zhanshu)
- Shanghai Municipality (Party Chief Yu Zhengsheng [previously mentioned], Mayor Han Zheng)
- Jiangsu (Party Chief Liang Baohua, Governor Luo Zhijun)
- Zhejiang (Party Chief Zhao Hongzhu, Governor Lu Zushan)
- Anhui (Party Chief Wang Jinshan, Governor Wang Sanyun)
- Fujian (Party Chief Lu Zhangong, Governor Huang Xiaojing)
- Jiangxi (Party Chief Su Rong, Governor Wu Xinxiong)
- Shandong (Party Chief Jiang Yikang, Governor Jiang Daming)
- Henan (Party Chief Xu Guangchun, Governor Guo Gengmao)
- Hubei (Party Chief Luo Qingquan, Governor Li Hongzhong)
- Hunan (Party Chief Zhang Chunxian, Governor Zhou Qiang)
- Guangdong (Party Chief Wang Yang [previously mentioned], Governor Huang Huahua)
- Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region (Party Chief Guo Shengkun, Chairman Ma Biao)
- Hainan (Party Chief Wei Liucheng , Governor Luo Baoming)
- Chongqing Municipality (Party Chief Bo Xilai [previously mentioned], Mayor Wang Hongju)
- Sichuan (Party Chief Liu Qibao, Governor Jiang Jufeng)
- Guizhou (Party Chief Shi Zongyuan, Governor Lin Shusen)
- Yunnan (Party Chief Bai Enpei, Governor Qin Guangrong)
- Tibet Autonomous Region (Party Chief Zhang Qingli, Chairman Qiangba Puncog)
- Shaanxi (Party Chief Zhao Leji, Governor Yuan Chunqing)
- Gansu (Party Chief Lu Hao, Governor Xu Shousheng)
- Qinghai (Party Chief Qiang Wei, Governor Song Xiuyan)
- Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region (Party Chief Chen Jianguo, Chairman Wang Zhengwei)
- Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (Party Chief Wang Lequan [previously mentioned], Chairman Nur Bekri)
- The Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong (Chief Executive Donald Tsang)
- The Special Administrative Region of Macau (Chief Executive Edmund Ho Hau-wah)
- Representatives of Taiwan Province
All subsequent rankings follow the Chinese political ranking system. [edit] Rankings below the National Leadership Within the PRC, there is an established convention as to the ranking of officials below the central leadership. Unlike in the west, the Provincial leaders do not enjoy an elevated presence in their own province. Rather they must still be placed behind all national leaders listed above. It should be noted that departmental heads of the Communist Party of China, and ministers of the State Council are both called bùzhǎng (部长; literally "Head of Department"), but the Party heads are ranked half a rank above/below cabinet ministers, reflecting the Party's "vanguard" status. Thus, for example, the head of the Party's International Department (中联部) is treated as half a rank below the minister for Foreign Affairs (外交部). [edit] See also |