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Hard-line communist to head China political advisory bodyBy Gillian Wong, AP BEIJING--China took another step toward completing its leadership handover Monday with the appointment of an official best known for his communist pedigree to head a top government advisory body.
March 12, 2013, 12:19 am TWN Yu Zhengsheng (俞正聲) was selected by a vote of 2,188 to 4 to head the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), a companion body to the country's rubber-stamp legislature. There was no other candidate in the CPPCC vote. Yu's selection is the latest step in China's once-a-decade political transition and kicks off a week of formal government leadership changes that were foreshadowed by promotions at the Communist Party's congress in November. In China, the party is the pre-eminent political power and top government posts are held by its leaders. Yu was among seven leaders who ascended to the party's top inner circle at the November conclave which also anointed Xi Jinping as general secretary. Yu is ranked fourth in the party. This week, the largely ceremonial legislature known as the National People's Congress will finalize the transition and approve appointments to top government posts: Xi is certain to succeed Hu Jintao as president while Li Keqiang is to be named premier, in charge of the Cabinet. Yu, 67, was Communist Party chief in the financial hub of Shanghai until shortly after his latest party promotion. He held the post of construction minister in the 1990s, when China suffered a series of building collapses that prompted the party to launch a campaign to improve construction safety. A missile engineer by training, Yu is best known for his status as a “princeling” — the label assigned to the politically influential sons and daughters of leaders who struggled alongside Mao Zedong in the early years of the communist state. Yu's father was the ex-husband of a woman who later married Mao. His family history has been problematic, however: His brother, an official in the Ministry of State Security, China's secret police, defected to the United States in the mid-1980s. Yu's connections to patriarch Deng Xiaoping's family are believed to have kept him in the running for promotion to the apex of power. Yu now heads a 2,200-plus advisory body made up of carefully selected entrepreneurs, intellectuals, religious clerics and celebrities. The group has no real power but in recent years has become more important as representatives have used the platform to advocate for hot-button issues such as food safety, pollution and land seizures. |
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