Political And Legislative Affairs Committee Of The Communist Party Of China
The CPLC functions as "the general chief of staff of the party committees, and represents the party in overseeing the country’s intelligence, law enforcement, judicial, and to a lesser extent, lawmaking systems". The CPLC maintains effective control over the court system and its personnel. The CPLC ensures that courts implement CCP policies and vets law enforcement officers for political reliability. It is the "organizational linchpin of the Chinese surveillance state," according to Minxin Pei. Its control of China's justice system has been especially useful and important for the CCP since the beginning of Chinese economic reform, because the CPLC has acted, through judges and prosecutors, to seize the assets and imprison those businesspeople who were becoming economically powerful enough to acquire a base independent from that of the party.
The commission is headed by a secretary who is usually a CCP Politburo member.
History
The commission was preceded by a Politics and Law Leading Group (政法领导小组; Zhèngfǎ Lǐngdǎo Xiǎozǔ) which was set up in 1958, with Peng Zhen as its leader. During the Cultural Revolution it was led by Ji Dengkui, who served as group leader until 24 January 1980, when the commission was established, with Peng Zhen back as its secretary.
In 1988, the commission was downgraded to a small leading group (领导小组). This was part of the result of efforts by reformist Zhao Ziyang to separate the CCP from state institutions. The Small Leading Group on Political and Legal Affairs focused on a narrower set of policy and research concerns, and did not take as active a role intervening in cases or issuing directives, resulting in a degree of increased independence of the judiciary. The crisis precipitated by the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre resulted in a reversal of these reforms, and the Small Group was reverted to its Commission status in March 1990, with the goal of maintaining stability through tighter control of public security and legal systems.
After the 18th National Congress of the CCP in 2012, Meng Jianzhu replaced Zhou Yongkang as the head of the commission. However, Meng, unlike Zhou, was not elected to the 18th CCP Politburo Standing Committee. The apparent downgrading of the post followed Zhou's connection with the Wang Lijun incident, which has discredited Chongqing politician Bo Xilai's method of using the internal security apparatus for political ends. As a result, the independence of the judiciary in China increased. Reforms under CCP general secretary Xi Jinping emphasizing simultaneous need for rule of law and stability have subsequently affected the commission. The commission now has a more policy-and-research oriented focus, although the CCP still maintains control over the legal system.
In March 2018, it was put in charge of maintaining comprehensive public security after the abolishment of the Central Committee for Comprehensive Management of Public Security and its office. It also took over the responsibilities of the Central Leading Group on Dealing with Heretical Religions and its executive organ, the 610 Office, after their abolition.
In May 2021, the commission was criticized after an account belonging to it posted an image on Sina Weibo of a rocket launch in China next to a photo of mass cremations in India as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In 2021, it was reported that the commission operates a predictive policing system against Uyghurs and others.
In 2023, Chen Wenqing directed CCP committees at all levels to "attach great importance to, concern themselves with, and support covert front work."
List of heads
Leaders of the Central Political and Law Group
- Peng Zhen (Chinese: 彭真) (1958)
- Luo Ruiqing (Chinese: 罗瑞卿) (1958–1960)
- Xie Fuzhi (Chinese: 谢富治) (1960–1966)
- Ji Dengkui (Chinese: 纪登奎) (1969–1980)
Secretaries of the Central Politics and Legal Affairs Commission
- Peng Zhen (Chinese: 彭真) (1980–1982)
- Chen Pixian (Chinese: 陈丕显) (1982–1985)
- Qiao Shi (Chinese: 乔石) (1985–1992)
- Ren Jianxin (Chinese: 任建新) (1992–1998)
- Luo Gan (Chinese: 罗干) (1998–2007)
- Zhou Yongkang (Chinese: 周永康) (2007–2012)
- Meng Jianzhu (Chinese: 孟建柱) (2012–2017)
- Guo Shengkun (Chinese: 郭声琨) (2017–2022)
- Chen Wenqing (Chinese: 陈文清) (2022-)
Corruption charges against past secretaries
In 2013 and 2014, the Politburo of the CCP Central Committee held meetings to hear the findings of an investigation against Zhou Yongkang and, in June 2015, Zhou was found guilty of accepting bribes, abuse of power, intentionally leaking state secrets for which his private possessions were confiscated and he was sentenced to life in prison. Zhou is among the most senior and powerful Chinese leaders to be jailed in CCP general secretary Xi Jinping's crackdown. Zhou's wife and son were jailed for graft charges and his nephew, Zhou Feng, was fined 59 million yuan (approximately $9 million USD).
Current composition
- Secretary
- Chen Wenqing, Member of the 20th Politburo, Secretary of the Central Secretariat
- Deputy Secretary
- Members
- Chief Justice Zhang Jun, President of the Supreme People's Court (sub-national-leader-level)
- Prosecutor General Ying Yong, Prosecutor General of the Supreme People's Procuratorate (sub-national-leader-level)
- Chen Yixin, Minister of State Security (minister-level)
- He Rong, Minister of Justice (minister-level)
- PLA Vice Admiral Wang Renhua, Secretary of the Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the Central Military Commission
- PAP General Wang Chunning, Commander of the People's Armed Police
- Yin Bai, Secretary-General of the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission (minister-level)
References
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- ^ Stone Sweet, Alec; Bu, Chong; Zhuo, Ding (25 May 2023). "Breaching the Taboo? Constitutional Dimensions of the New Chinese Civil Code". Asian Journal of Comparative Law. 18 (3): 319–344. doi:10.1017/asjcl.2023.18. ISSN 2194-6078.
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- ^ "习近平极限思维新发展 强化隐蔽战线". Radio France Internationale (in Simplified Chinese). 2023-07-15. Archived from the original on 2023-07-19. Retrieved 2023-07-19.
- ^ Faligot, Roger (June 2019). Chinese Spies: From Chairman Mao to Xi Jinping. Oxford University Press. pp. 117–118. ISBN 978-1-78738-096-7. OCLC 1104999295. Archived from the original on 2020-08-23. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
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- ^ "China's former security chief given life sentence for corruption". The Guardian. 2015-06-11. Archived from the original on 2021-05-25. Retrieved 2022-07-23.
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