System of people's congress
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The system of people's congress (
System
According to the PRC constitution, all power belongs to the people, and National People's Congress and local people's congresses are the bodies through which the people exercise state power.[2][non-primary source needed] The NPC is officially China's highest organ of state power, with the Standing Committee being its permanent body.[2][non-primary source needed]
Levels
The People's Congress System was set out in the Electoral Law of 1953 and has been subsequently revised.[3] Currently, there are five levels of people's congresses.[3] From more to less local, they are:[3]
- people's congresses in villages, minority nationality townships, and towns;
- people's congresses of cities that are not sub-divided, municipal districts, counties, and autonomous counties;
- people's congresses in sub-districts of larger cities and in autonomous prefectures;
- people's congresses in direct-administered municipalities; and
- the National People's Congress.
Direct elections occur at the two most local levels, while the members at the higher levels are indirectly elected, i.e., elected by those elected in the lower levels.[3] The size of the people's congresses increase with their administrative rank.[4] With some exceptions, township people's congresses usually have 40 to 130 deputies, county people's congresses from 120 to 450, prefectural people's congresses from 240 to 650, provincial people's congresses from 350 to 1,000, and the NPC at around 3,000. The total number of people's congresses throughout China at different levels is over 40,000, and the total number of deputies is in the hundreds of thousands.[4]
Role of the Chinese Communist Party
Nominations at all levels are controlled by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), and the CCP's supreme position is enshrined in the state constitution, meaning that the elections have little way of influencing politics.[5][4] The CCP, through its control of the nomination process, ensures that around 70% of deputies to the people's congresses are party members.[4] The top positions in the system are granted to senior CCP leaders, including the position of the NPCSC chairman, who has always been a member of the Politburo Standing Committee, and the NPCSC vice chairperson positions.[4] Additionally, elections are not pluralistic as no opposition is allowed.[5]
The CCP has a central role in lawmaking, which has fluctuated over time.[6][7][8][9] The CCP effectively sits above any legal code and the constitution of the People's Republic of China.[10] CCP principles and slogans are codified into the state's legal code to increase the legitimacy of party rule.[10] The role of the CCP in lawmaking increased under CCP General Secretary Xi Jinping's tenure.[11] Through a variety of documents circulated within the CCP, the party directs China's lawmaking organs such as the NPC Standing Committee in the lawmaking process.[12][13]
See also
References
Citations
- ISSN 1080-6954.
- ^ a b "About Congress". National People's Congress. Archived from the original on 24 September 2023. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- ^ a b c d Boer 2021, p. 193.
- ^ a b c d e Truex 2016, p. 158–175.
- ^ a b "Democracy". Decoding China. Heidelberg University. 4 February 2021. Archived from the original on 2022-08-16. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
- S2CID 154784276.
- ISSN 1395-4199.
- S2CID 154503140.
- ISBN 978-90-411-1433-4.
- ^ from the original on 2023-07-17. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
The party sits above any legal code and even China's constitution, its powers unchecked by any court. Indeed, Mr Xi denounces judicial independence and the separation of powers as dangerous foreign ideas. Instead, to hear legal scholars explain it, Mr Xi is offering rule by law: ie, professional governance by officials following standardised procedures. At home, the party hopes that this sort of authoritarian rule will enjoy more legitimacy than a previously prevailing alternative: arbitrary decision-making by (often corrupt) officials.
- ISBN 978-0-19-086607-5.
- ISBN 978-1-351-95197-5.
- ^ 刘松山, 2017-05-24, 法学月刊杂志社. "党领导立法工作需要研究解决的几个重要问题". Archived from the original on 19 December 2017. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
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Works cited
- OCLC 1249470522.)
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link - Truex, Rory (2016). Making Autocracy Work: Representation and Responsiveness in Modern China. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107172432.