Central Committee
Central Committee was the common designation of a standing administrative body of communist parties, analogous to a board of directors, whether ruling or non-ruling in the 20th century and of the surviving communist states in the 21st century. In such party organizations the committee would typically be made up of delegates elected at a party congress. In those states where it constituted the state power, the Central Committee made decisions for the party between congresses, and usually was (at least nominally) responsible for electing the Politburo. In non-ruling Communist parties, the Central Committee is usually understood by the party membership to be the ultimate decision-making authority between Congresses once the process of democratic centralism has led to an agreed-upon position.
Non-Communist organizations are also governed by Central Committees, such as the right-wing Likud party in Israel, the Mennonite Church[1] and Alcoholics Anonymous, as well as the Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (to war). In the United States the two major parties are administered by the Democratic National Committee and the Republican National Committee; these act as the leading bodies of those organizations at the national/administrative level, as well as local committees in a similar capacity within the local Democratic or Republican governments of individual counties and states.
List of Central Committees
Communist
- Central Committee of the Communist Party of Russian Federation
- Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
- Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba
- Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
- Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam
- Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia
- Central Committee of the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party
- Central Committee of the Italian Communist Party
- Central Committee of the Party of Labor of Albania
- Central Committee of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan
- Central Committee of the Polish United Workers' Party
- Central Committee of the South African Communist Party
- Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
- Central Committee of the Lao People's Revolutionary Party
Non-Communist
- Central Committee of Fatah (Socialist)
- Central Committee of SWAPO, Namibia (Social democracy and Democratic socialism)
- Central Committee of the Pakistan Peoples Party (Social democracy and Democratic socialism)
- Central Committee of the Likud (National Liberalism and Liberal Conservatism)[2]
See also
Notes
- ↑ Menonite Central Committee web site
- ↑ "Organs of the Likud | The Likud Party". Retrieved 6 March 2017.