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Politics of Shanghai

The politics of Shanghai[1] is structured in a dual party-government system like all other governing institutions in the mainland of the People's Republic of China (PRC). In the last few decades the city has produced many of the country's eventual senior leaders, including Jiang Zemin, Zhu Rongji, Wu Bangguo, Huang Ju, Xi Jinping, Yu Zhengsheng, Han Zheng, and Li Qiang.

Politics of Shanghai
LegislatureShanghai Municipal People's Congress
Websitewww.shanghai.gov.cn
Communist Party
PartyChinese Communist Party Shanghai Committee
SecretaryChen Jining
Government
ExecutiveMunicipal People's Government
MayorGong Zheng
Executive Deputy MayorWu Qing
Congress ChairmanJiang Zhuoqing
Local CPPCC ChairmanDong Yunhu
Commission for Discipline Inspection SecretaryLiu Xuexin
Supervisory DirectorLiu Xuexin
Court PresidentLiu Xiaoyun
Procurator GeneralChen Yong
MilitaryPeople's Liberation Army Shanghai Garrison
CommanderLiu Jie
Shanghai Municipal Government building

Overview

The Mayor of the Shanghai Municipal People's Government (上海市人民政府市长, shorten as 上海市市长 ie Mayor of Shanghai Municipality) is the highest ranking executive official in Shanghai. Since Shanghai is a direct-controlled municipality of China, the Mayor occupies the same level in the order of precedence as provincial governors. However, in the city's dual party-government governing system, the mayor has less power than the Communist Party of China Shanghai Municipal Committee Secretary (中国共产党上海市委员会书记, shorten as 中共上海市委书记), colloquially termed the "Shanghai CCP Party Chief" in English.

Before 1941, Shanghai had a split administration: the International Settlement (governed under the Shanghai Municipal Council), the French Concession, and the Chinese City. The Chinese city was invaded by the Japanese in 1937 and the foreign concessions were occupied by the Japanese in 1941. After the occupation, the foreign powers formally ceded the territory to the Nationalist Government in Chongqing (a move largely symbolic until the Japanese surrender since the Nationalists no longer controlled Shanghai).

List of provincial-level leaders

Secretaries of the Communist Party Shanghai Committee

Order Party Committee Secretary Term Notes
1 Rao Shushi 1949—1950 later purged in 1954
2 Chen Yi 1950—1954 Communist revolutionary, Marshal of the People's Liberation Army
Foreign Minister (1958-1972)
3 Ke Qingshi 1954—1965
4 Chen Pixian 1965—1967 Removed from office during January Storm
5 Zhang Chunqiao 1971—1976 Politburo Standing Committee (1973-1976)
Member of the Gang of Four
Titled "Secretary of the Revolutionary Committee of Shanghai"
6 Su Zhenhua 1976—1979 De facto Peng Chong; General, Admiral
7 Peng Chong 1979—1980
8 Chen Guodong 1980—1985
9 Rui Xingwen 1985—1987
10 Jiang Zemin 1987—1989 Politburo Standing Committee (1989-2002)
General Secretary (1989-2002) and President (1993-2003)
11 Zhu Rongji 1989—1991 Politburo Standing Committee (1992-2002)
Premier (1998-2003)
12 Wu Bangguo 1991—1994 Politburo Standing Committee (2002-2012)
Chairman of the National People's Congress (2002-2012)
13 Huang Ju 1994— 15 November 2002 Politburo Standing Committee (2002-2006)
Vice-Premier (2002-2006)
14 Chen Liangyu 15 November 2002 — 24 September 2006 dismissed for corruption, convicted in 2008, jailed.
Han Zheng 24 September 2006 — 24 March 2007 Acting
15 Xi Jinping 24 March 2007 — 27 October 2007 Politburo Standing Committee (2007-)
General Secretary (2012-), President (2013-)
16 Yu Zhengsheng 27 October 2007 — 20 November 2012 Politburo Standing Committee (2012-2017)
National Committee Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
17 Han Zheng 20 November 2012 — 29 October 2017 Politburo Standing Committee (2017-2022)
Vice-Premier(2018- )
18 Li Qiang 29 October 2017 — 28 October 2022 Politburo Standing Committee (2022- )
19 Chen Jining 28 October 2022 —

Mayors of Shanghai

Prior to the establishment of the office of Mayor of Shanghai, the city's administration was overseen by the circuit intendant ("taotai" / "daotai", 道臺). The office was abolished at the fall of the Qing.

Mayor Term Notes
Huang Fu 7 July 1927 - April 1929 First mayor of Shanghai.
Zhang Qun 1 April 1929 - 6 January 1932
Wu Tiecheng January 1932 - April 1937
Yu Hung-chun April 1937 - November 1937 Fled city following fall of Shanghai to the Empire of Japan in the Battle of Shanghai.
Chen Gongbo November 1940 - December 1944 Japanese collaborationist
Zhou Fohai December 1944 - August 1945 last Japanese collaborationist mayor, arrested by Kuomintang forces
K. C. Wu August 1945 - May 1949 last Kuomintang mayor, fled after communist takeover
Chen Yi May 1949 — November 1958 Military Commander, first Communist mayor
Ke Qingshi November 1958 — 9 April 1965
Cao Diqiu December 1965 — 24 February 1967 purged during the Cultural Revolution
Zhang Chunqiao 24 February 1967 — October 1976 Chairman of Shanghai Revolutionary Committee
Member of Gang of Four, sentenced for treason
Su Zhenhua November 1976 — 7 February 1979 Chairman of Shanghai Revolutionary Committee
Peng Chong 7 February 1979 — April 1981 De facto head from late 1976.
Wang Daohan April 1981 — July 1985 Jiang mentor
Jiang Zemin July 1985 — April 1988 Promoted to party chief
Zhu Rongji April 1988 — April 1991 Promoted to party chief
Huang Ju April 1991 — February 1995 Promoted to party chief
Xu Kuangdi February 1995 — 7 December 2001 Demoted
Chen Liangyu 7 December 2001 — 21 February 2003 Promoted to party chief
Han Zheng 21 February 2003 — 26 December 2012 Concurrently acting party chief 2006-2007, promoted to party chief in 2012
Yang Xiong 26 December 2012 — 17 January 2017
Ying Yong 20 January 2017 — 12 February 2020
Gong Zheng 23 March 2020 —

Chairpersons of Shanghai People's Congress

  1. Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Shanghai Municipal People's Congress
    Incumbent
    Dong Yunhu
    since January 15, 2023
    StatusLegislature leader
    Term lengthFive years, renewable
    Yan Youmin (严佑民): 1979-1981
  2. Hu Lijiao (胡立教): 1981-1988
  3. Ye Gongqi (叶公琦): 1988-1998
  4. Chen Tiedi (陈铁迪) (female): 1998-2003
  5. Gong Xueping (龚学平): 2003-2008
  6. Liu Yungeng (刘云耕): 2008-2013
  7. Yin Yicui (殷一璀) (female): 2013-2020
  8. Jiang Zhuoqing (蒋卓庆): 2020-2023
  9. Dong Yunhu (董云虎): 2023-incumbent

Chairpersons of the Political Conference Shanghai Committee

  1. Chairman of Shanghai Municipal Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
    Incumbent
    Hu Wenrong
    since January 14, 2023
    StatusLocal CPPCC leader
    Term lengthFive years, renewable
    Ke Qingshi (柯庆施): 1955-1958
  2. Chen Pixian (陈丕显): 1958-1967
  3. Peng Chong (彭冲): 1977-1979
  4. Wang Yiping (王一平): 1979-1983
  5. Prof. Li Guohao (李国豪): 1983-1988
  6. Prof. Xie Xide (谢希德) (female): 1988-1993
  7. Chen Tiedi (陈铁迪) (female): 1993-1998
  8. Wang Liping (王力平): 1998-2003
  9. Jiang Yiren (蒋以任): 2003-2008
  10. Feng Guoqin (冯国勤): 2008-2013
  11. Wu Zhiming (吴志明): 2013-2018
  12. Dong Yunhu (董云虎): 2018-2023
  13. Hu Wenrong (胡文容): 2023-incumbent

Chairpersons of the Shanghai Supervisory Committee

  1. Liao Guoxun (廖国勋): January 2018-March 2020
  2. Liu Xuexin (刘学新): July 2020-October 2022
  3. Li Yangzhe (李仰哲): October 2022-incumbent

See also

References

  1. ^ "Politics of Shanghai". South China Morning Post. China. Retrieved August 12, 2013.

politics, shanghai, this, article, about, government, people, republic, china, government, taiwan, government, republic, china, governments, chinese, history, government, china, disambiguation, current, state, council, keqiang, government, this, article, needs. This article is about the government of the People s Republic of China For the government of Taiwan see Government of the Republic of China For the governments in Chinese history see Government of China disambiguation For the current State Council see Li Keqiang Government This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Politics of Shanghai news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The politics of Shanghai 1 is structured in a dual party government system like all other governing institutions in the mainland of the People s Republic of China PRC In the last few decades the city has produced many of the country s eventual senior leaders including Jiang Zemin Zhu Rongji Wu Bangguo Huang Ju Xi Jinping Yu Zhengsheng Han Zheng and Li Qiang Politics of ShanghaiNational Emblem of the People s Republic of ChinaLegislatureShanghai Municipal People s CongressWebsitewww wbr shanghai wbr gov wbr cnCommunist PartyPartyChinese Communist Party Shanghai CommitteeSecretaryChen JiningGovernmentExecutiveMunicipal People s GovernmentMayorGong ZhengExecutive Deputy MayorWu QingCongress ChairmanJiang ZhuoqingLocal CPPCC ChairmanDong YunhuCommission for Discipline Inspection SecretaryLiu XuexinSupervisory DirectorLiu XuexinCourt PresidentLiu XiaoyunProcurator GeneralChen YongMilitaryPeople s Liberation Army Shanghai GarrisonCommanderLiu JieShanghai Municipal Government building Contents 1 Overview 2 List of provincial level leaders 2 1 Secretaries of the Communist Party Shanghai Committee 2 2 Mayors of Shanghai 2 3 Chairpersons of Shanghai People s Congress 2 4 Chairpersons of the Political Conference Shanghai Committee 2 5 Chairpersons of the Shanghai Supervisory Committee 3 See also 4 ReferencesOverview EditThe Mayor of the Shanghai Municipal People s Government 上海市人民政府市长 shorten as 上海市市长 ie Mayor of Shanghai Municipality is the highest ranking executive official in Shanghai Since Shanghai is a direct controlled municipality of China the Mayor occupies the same level in the order of precedence as provincial governors However in the city s dual party government governing system the mayor has less power than the Communist Party of China Shanghai Municipal Committee Secretary 中国共产党上海市委员会书记 shorten as 中共上海市委书记 colloquially termed the Shanghai CCP Party Chief in English Before 1941 Shanghai had a split administration the International Settlement governed under the Shanghai Municipal Council the French Concession and the Chinese City The Chinese city was invaded by the Japanese in 1937 and the foreign concessions were occupied by the Japanese in 1941 After the occupation the foreign powers formally ceded the territory to the Nationalist Government in Chongqing a move largely symbolic until the Japanese surrender since the Nationalists no longer controlled Shanghai List of provincial level leaders EditSecretaries of the Communist Party Shanghai Committee Edit Order Party Committee Secretary Term Notes1 Rao Shushi 1949 1950 later purged in 19542 Chen Yi 1950 1954 Communist revolutionary Marshal of the People s Liberation ArmyForeign Minister 1958 1972 3 Ke Qingshi 1954 19654 Chen Pixian 1965 1967 Removed from office during January Storm5 Zhang Chunqiao 1971 1976 Politburo Standing Committee 1973 1976 Member of the Gang of FourTitled Secretary of the Revolutionary Committee of Shanghai 6 Su Zhenhua 1976 1979 De facto Peng Chong General Admiral7 Peng Chong 1979 19808 Chen Guodong 1980 19859 Rui Xingwen 1985 198710 Jiang Zemin 1987 1989 Politburo Standing Committee 1989 2002 General Secretary 1989 2002 and President 1993 2003 11 Zhu Rongji 1989 1991 Politburo Standing Committee 1992 2002 Premier 1998 2003 12 Wu Bangguo 1991 1994 Politburo Standing Committee 2002 2012 Chairman of the National People s Congress 2002 2012 13 Huang Ju 1994 15 November 2002 Politburo Standing Committee 2002 2006 Vice Premier 2002 2006 14 Chen Liangyu 15 November 2002 24 September 2006 dismissed for corruption convicted in 2008 jailed Han Zheng 24 September 2006 24 March 2007 Acting15 Xi Jinping 24 March 2007 27 October 2007 Politburo Standing Committee 2007 General Secretary 2012 President 2013 16 Yu Zhengsheng 27 October 2007 20 November 2012 Politburo Standing Committee 2012 2017 National Committee Chairman of the Chinese People s Political Consultative Conference17 Han Zheng 20 November 2012 29 October 2017 Politburo Standing Committee 2017 2022 Vice Premier 2018 18 Li Qiang 29 October 2017 28 October 2022 Politburo Standing Committee 2022 19 Chen Jining 28 October 2022 Mayors of Shanghai Edit See also List of mayors of Shanghai Prior to the establishment of the office of Mayor of Shanghai the city s administration was overseen by the circuit intendant taotai daotai 道臺 The office was abolished at the fall of the Qing Mayor Term NotesHuang Fu 7 July 1927 April 1929 First mayor of Shanghai Zhang Qun 1 April 1929 6 January 1932Wu Tiecheng January 1932 April 1937Yu Hung chun April 1937 November 1937 Fled city following fall of Shanghai to the Empire of Japan in the Battle of Shanghai Chen Gongbo November 1940 December 1944 Japanese collaborationistZhou Fohai December 1944 August 1945 last Japanese collaborationist mayor arrested by Kuomintang forcesK C Wu August 1945 May 1949 last Kuomintang mayor fled after communist takeoverChen Yi May 1949 November 1958 Military Commander first Communist mayorKe Qingshi November 1958 9 April 1965Cao Diqiu December 1965 24 February 1967 purged during the Cultural RevolutionZhang Chunqiao 24 February 1967 October 1976 Chairman of Shanghai Revolutionary Committee Member of Gang of Four sentenced for treasonSu Zhenhua November 1976 7 February 1979 Chairman of Shanghai Revolutionary CommitteePeng Chong 7 February 1979 April 1981 De facto head from late 1976 Wang Daohan April 1981 July 1985 Jiang mentorJiang Zemin July 1985 April 1988 Promoted to party chiefZhu Rongji April 1988 April 1991 Promoted to party chiefHuang Ju April 1991 February 1995 Promoted to party chiefXu Kuangdi February 1995 7 December 2001 DemotedChen Liangyu 7 December 2001 21 February 2003 Promoted to party chiefHan Zheng 21 February 2003 26 December 2012 Concurrently acting party chief 2006 2007 promoted to party chief in 2012Yang Xiong 26 December 2012 17 January 2017Ying Yong 20 January 2017 12 February 2020Gong Zheng 23 March 2020 Chairpersons of Shanghai People s Congress Edit Main article Shanghai People s Congress Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Shanghai Municipal People s CongressIncumbentDong Yunhusince January 15 2023StatusLegislature leaderTerm lengthFive years renewableYan Youmin 严佑民 1979 1981 Hu Lijiao 胡立教 1981 1988 Ye Gongqi 叶公琦 1988 1998 Chen Tiedi 陈铁迪 female 1998 2003 Gong Xueping 龚学平 2003 2008 Liu Yungeng 刘云耕 2008 2013 Yin Yicui 殷一璀 female 2013 2020 Jiang Zhuoqing 蒋卓庆 2020 2023 Dong Yunhu 董云虎 2023 incumbentChairpersons of the Political Conference Shanghai Committee Edit Chairman of Shanghai Municipal Committee of the Chinese People s Political Consultative ConferenceIncumbentHu Wenrongsince January 14 2023StatusLocal CPPCC leaderTerm lengthFive years renewableKe Qingshi 柯庆施 1955 1958 Chen Pixian 陈丕显 1958 1967 Peng Chong 彭冲 1977 1979 Wang Yiping 王一平 1979 1983 Prof Li Guohao 李国豪 1983 1988 Prof Xie Xide 谢希德 female 1988 1993 Chen Tiedi 陈铁迪 female 1993 1998 Wang Liping 王力平 1998 2003 Jiang Yiren 蒋以任 2003 2008 Feng Guoqin 冯国勤 2008 2013 Wu Zhiming 吴志明 2013 2018 Dong Yunhu 董云虎 2018 2023 Hu Wenrong 胡文容 2023 incumbentChairpersons of the Shanghai Supervisory Committee Edit Liao Guoxun 廖国勋 January 2018 March 2020 Liu Xuexin 刘学新 July 2020 October 2022 Li Yangzhe 李仰哲 October 2022 incumbentSee also Edit Politics portalCircuit intendant of Shanghai Old City of Shanghai Politics of Beijing Politics of Chongqing Politics of Tianjin Zhuang XiaotianReferences Edit Politics of Shanghai South China Morning Post China Retrieved August 12 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of Shanghai amp oldid 1134698236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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