State councilor
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The state councillor (Chinese: 国务委员; pinyin: guówù wěiyuán) is a powerful position within the State Council of the People's Republic of China, i.e. the executive organ of China's central government (comparable to a cabinet). It ranks immediately below the Vice-Premiers and above the Ministers of various departments.[1] The position was created during the May 1982 restructuring of the State Council, when eleven state councillors were appointed, ten of whom were vice premiers until then.[2]
Role
In theory, state councilors are to assist the Premier and Vice-Premiers to oversee various government portfolios. They can also represent the State Council (and in turn, China's government) on foreign visits. state councilors are part of a Standing Committee of the State Council, alongside the Premier, Vice-Premiers, and the Secretary General of the State Council. The organ holds weekly meetings. In practice, a state councilor's portfolios can be very wide-ranging. State councilors often accompany China's higher dignitaries on trips abroad - as was the case with State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan from 2003–08, and Dai Bingguo from 2008–present. Dai also became China's representative at the 2009 G8 Summit in Italy when President Hu Jintao decided to cut short his attendance to return to China in order to deal with the July 2009 Urumqi riots.
List of state councilors
5th State Council (1982–83)
The position was created during the May 1982 restructuring of the State Council. Eleven state councillors were appointed, ten of whom were vice premiers until then, the only exception being Zhang Jingfu.[2]
- Yu Qiuli
- Geng Biao
- Fang Yi
- Gu Mu
- Kang Shi'en
- Chen Muhua
- Bo Yibo
- Ji Pengfei
- Huang Hua
- Zhang Jingfu
- Zhang Aiping
6th State Council (1983–88)
- Fang Yi
- Gu Mu
- Kang Shi'en
- Chen Muhua
- Ji Pengfei
- Zhang Jingfu
- Zhang Aiping
- Wu Xueqian
- Wang Bingqian
- Song Ping
- Song Jian
7th State Council (1988–93)
- Li Tieying
- Qin Jiwei
- Wang Bingqian
- Song Jian
- Wang Fang
- Zou Jiahua
- Li Guixian
- Chen Xitong
- Chen Junsheng
- Qian Qichen
8th State Council (1993–98)
- Li Tieying
- Chi Haotian
- Song Jian
- Li Guixian
- Chen Junsheng
- Ismail Amat
- Peng Peiyun
- Luo Gan - Secretary General of the State Council
9th State Council (1998–2003)
- Chi Haotian
- Luo Gan
- Ismail Amat
- Wu Yi
- Wang Zhongyu - Secretary General of the State Council
10th State Council (2003–2008)
Chen Zhili | Hua Jianmin | Cao Gangchuan | Zhou Yongkang | Tang Jiaxuan |
---|---|---|---|---|
(education, culture, sports-related issues) |
Secretary General of the State Council (economic-related issues) |
Minister of Defence | Minister of Public Security | Foreign Minister |
11th State Council (2008–2013)
Liu Yandong | Ma Kai | Liang Guanglie | Meng Jianzhu | Dai Bingguo |
---|---|---|---|---|
(education, culture,
sports, Hong Kong and Macau affairs) |
Secretary General of the State Council (economic-related issues) |
Minister of Defence | Minister of Public Security | (foreign, Taiwan, and overseas Chinese affairs) |
12th State Council (2013–Present)[3]
Yang Jing | Chang Wanquan | Yang Jiechi | Guo Shengkun | Wang Yong |
---|---|---|---|---|
Secretary General of the State Council (economic-related issues) |
Minister of Defence | Deputy Director for National Leading Group for Climate Change and for Energy Conservation & Reduction of Pollution Discharge (foreign, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau |
Minister of Public Security | Director of the National Committee for Disaster Reduction (state-owned assets, work safety, |
References
- ↑ Laws on the composition of the State Council
- 1 2 Li, Jinshan (16 December 1998). Bureaucratic Restructure in Reforming China: A Redistribution of Political Power. World Scientific. p. 17. ISBN 978-981-4495-43-1.
- ↑ NPC endorses new cabinet lineup
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