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Thursday, October 18, 2007

Election procedures set for personnel reshuffle






Hu
Jintao(C) presides over the second meeting of presidium of the 17th National
Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) at the Great Hall of the People
in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 17, 2007. The seven-day 17th CPC National
Congress opened in Beijing on Oct. 15.
(Xinhua)
























BEIJING, Oct. 18 - The 17th National
Congress of the Communist Party of China will first hold a primary election
before a final ballot to choose members of a new CPC central committee and its
discipline commission, the presidium of the congress decided here Wednesday.

The 237-member presidium to oversee the congress held its second meeting
at the Great Hall of the People Wednesday afternoon, and adopted the electoral
procedure that has been in practice since the 13th party congress in 1987,
Xinhua was informed.

The presidium meeting, presided over by Hu Jintao, endorsed a proposed
name-list of nominees for the candidates of members and alternate members of the
central committee, and members of the central discipline commission. The
name-list will be submitted to all delegations to the congress for
consideration.

A name-list of ballot scrutineers was also accepted by the presidium, and
will be ratified by the congress before the final vote begins.

Zeng Qinghong, secretary-general of the congress, briefed the presidium
on the name-list of nominees.

In addition, the presidium adopted draft resolutions on the report made
by Hu Jintao on behalf of the 16th CPC Central Committee, the report of the
Central Discipline Commission and amendments to the party constitution. The
resolutions are to be submitted to delegates for consideration.

The presidium represents people of different aspects, consisting of
members of the Political Bureau of the 16th CPC Central Committee, retired party
veterans, leading officials of ministries and provincial-level localities,
military officers and grassroots party members.

Among the presidium are 29-year-old table tennis Olympic champion Wang
Nan, China's first astronaut in space Yang Liwei, outstanding female judge Song
Yushui, and "National Model Worker" bridge crane-driver Xu Zhenchao.

The personnel reshuffle is one of the most important agenda of party
congress. The CPC party constitution rules that all elections should be carried
out through secret ballot.

The primary election system was first introduced into party congress in
1956 when the 8th national party congress was held. Then at the 13th national
congress in 1987, the differential voting system was adopted.

At that congress, five percent of nominees lost in the primary election
for candidates of members of central committee, and 12 percent of nominees lost
in the election for candidates of alternate members.

The margin of elimination in the vote of the 14th and 15th national
congresses were not released. The 16th party congress, however, recorded a
margin of elimination at a little more than five percent.

At the 16th party congress in 2002, members of the central committee were
elected with a 5.1 percent margin, and alternate members of the central
committee, 5.7 percent. Seven people lost in the primary vote for members of the
Central Discipline Commission, marking a 5.8 percent margin.

Ye Duchu, a senior party expert with the Central Party School, said he
expected the margin of elimination this year to remain similar to that of the
15th and 16th party congresses, although some others have speculated that the
margin this time may be higher.

"The 15th and 16th party congresses adopted a margin of around five
percent, and I think the 17th congress will follow suit," Ye said.

Hu Jintao said in his report to the congress that the party should
"expand intra-party democracy."

"We will reform the intra-Party electoral system and improve the system
for nominating candidates and electoral methods," he said in the report.

In choosing delegates prior to the congress, all 38 constituencies
adopted a 15 percent margin in the elections, five percentage points higher than
that in 2002.

Who would become top party leaders of China will not be known until next
Tuesday, when the newly-elected members of the Standing Committee of the
Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee meet with the press.

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