15th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
In session from 1997 to 2002
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 15th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party was in session from 1997 to 2002. The 14th Central Committee preceded it. It was followed by the 16th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party. This was the first Central Committee that current CCP general secretary Xi Jinping was elected to, as an alternative member.
It elected the 15th Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party in 1997. Plenary sessions were held by the politburo.
Members
- Ding Wenchang (䏿æ)
- Ding Guangen (ä¸å ³æ ¹)
- Yu Yongbo (äºæ°¸æ³¢)
- Ma Zhongchen (é©¬å¿ è£)
- Wang Ke (çå )
- Wang Yunkun (çäºå¤)
- Wang Lequan (ç乿³)
- Wang Zhaoguo
- Wang Maolin (çèæ)
- Wang Maorun (çèæ¶¦)
- Wang Zhongyu (çå¿ ç¦¹)
- Wang Luolin (çæ´æ)
- Wang Mengkui (çæ¢¦å¥)
- Wang Ruilin (ççæ)
- Yun Bulong (äºå¸é¾)
- Mao Rubai (æ¯å¦æ)
- Fang Zuqi (æ¹ç¥å²)
- Shi Yunsheng (ç³äºç)
- Lu Rongjing (å¢è£æ¯)
- Lu Ruihua (å¢çå)
- Ye Liansong (å¶è¿æ¾)
- Tian Fengshan (ç°å¤å±±)
- Tian Chengping (ç°æå¹³)
- Tian Jiyun (ç°çºªäº)
- Bai Lichen (ç½ç«å¿±)
- Bai Enpei (ç½æ©å¹)
- Linghu An (令çå®)
- Bao Xuding (å åå®)
- Ismail Amat (å¸é©¬ä¹Â·è¾ä¹°æ)
- Xing Shizhong (é¢ä¸å¿ )
- Hui Liangyu (åè¯ç)
- Zhu Lilan (æ±ä¸½å °)
- Zhu Yuli (æ±è²ç)
- Zhu Rongji
- Wu Shaozu (ä¼ç»ç¥)
- Hua Guofeng
- Doje Cering (å¤åæè®©)
- Liu Jiang (åæ±)
- Liu Qi
- Liu Yunshan (åäºå±±)
- Liu Fangren (åæ¹ä»)
- Liu Shutian (å书ç°)
- Liu Zhongli (å仲è)
- Liu Huaqiu (ååç§)
- Liu Jiyuan (å纪å)
- Liu Mingzu (åæç¥)
- Liu Zhongde (åå¿ å¾·)
- Liu Shunyao (å顺尧)
- Liu Jianfeng (ååé)
- Liu Jingsong (åç²¾æ¾)
- Jiang Zemin
- Sun Ying (åè±)
- Sun Wensheng (åæç)
- Sun Jiazheng (åå®¶æ£)
- Du Qinglin (æéæ)
- Du Tiehuan (æéç¯)
- Li Peng
- Li Changchun
- Li Zhaozhuo (æå ç¯)
- Li Keqiang
- Li Lanqing
- Li Lianghui (æè¯è¾)
- Li Jinhua
- Li Zemin (ææ³½æ°)
- Li Jianguo (æå»ºå½)
- Li Chunting (ææ¥äº)
- Li Guixian (æè´µé²)
- Li Tieying (æéæ )
- Li Jinai (æç»§è)
- Li Shenglin (æçé)
- Li Ruihuan
- Li Xinliang (ææ°è¯)
- Li Dezhu (æå¾·æ´)
- Yang Zhengwu (æ¨æ£å)
- Yang Huaiqing (æ¨æåº)
- Yang Guoping (æ¨å½å±)
- Yang Guoliang (æ¨å½æ¢)
- Xiao Yang
- Wu Yi
- Wu Bangguo
- Wu Yixia (å´äº¦ä¾ )
- Wu Guanzheng
- Wu Jichuan (å´åºä¼ )
- He Yong (ä½å)
- He Chunlin (使¤¿é)
- Wang Xiaofeng (汪å¸é£)
- Song Jian (å®å¥)
- Song Baorui (å®å®ç)
- Song Ruixiang (å®ç祥)
- Song Defu (å®å¾·ç¦)
- Chi Haotian (è¿æµ©ç°)
- Zhang Gong (å¼ å·¥)
- Zhang Dinghua (å¼ ä¸å)
- Zhang Wannian (å¼ ä¸å¹´)
- Zhang Wenyue (å¼ æå²³)
- Zhang Wenkang (å¼ æåº·)
- Zhang Lichang (å¼ ç«æ)
- Zhang Zhijian (å¼ å¿å)
- Zhang Guoguang (å¼ å½å )
- Zhang Siqing
- Zhang Junjiu (å¼ ä¿ä¹)
- Zhang Weiqing (å¼ ç»´åº)
- Zhang Fusen
- Zhang Dejiang (å¼ å¾·æ±)
- Zhang Delin (å¼ å¾·é»)
- Abdul'ahat Abdulrixit (é¿ä¸æ¥æÂ·é¿ä¸é½ç西æ)
- Chen Yunlin (éäºæ)
- Chen Bangzhu (é馿±)
- Chen Zhili (éè³ç«)
- Chen Guangyi (éå æ¯ )
- Chen Mingyi (éæä¹)
- Chen Kuiyuan (éå¥å )
- Chen Bingde (éç³å¾·)
- Chen Huanyou (éçå)
- Chen Yaobang (éèé¦)
- Shao Huaze (éµåæ³½)
- Lin Liyun (æä¸½é«)
- Luo Gan
- Zhou Ziyu (å¨åç)
- Zhou Yongkang
- Zhou Guangzhao (å¨å å¬)
- Zhou Kunren (å¨å¤ä»)
- Zheng Bijian (éå¿ å)
- Zheng Silin (鿝æ)
- Xiang Huaicheng (项æè¯)
- Hao Jianxiu (é建ç§)
- Hu Fuguo (è¡å¯å½)
- Hu Jintao
- Niu Maosheng (é®èç)
- Yu Zhengsheng (ä¿æ£å£°)
- Wen Shizhen (é»ä¸é)
- Jiang Chunyun (å§æ¥äº)
- Jiang Enzhu (å§æ©æ±)
- Jiang Futang (å§ç¦å )
- Hong Hu (æ´ªè)
- He Guoqiang
- Raidi (çå°)
- Gui Shiyong (æ¡ä¸é)
- Jia Qinglin
- Jia Zhijie (è´¾å¿æ°)
- Jia Chunwang
- Gu Xiulian (顾ç§è²)
- Chai Songyue (æ´æ¾å²³)
- Qian Qichen
- Qian Guoliang (é±å½æ¢)
- Qian Shugen (鱿 æ ¹)
- Ni Zhifu (åªå¿ç¦)
- Xu Caihou (徿å)
- Xu Yongqing (徿°¸æ¸ )
- Xu Kuangdi
- Xu Youfang (徿è³)
- Gao Yan (é«ä¸¥)
- Guo Dongpo (éä¸å¡)
- Guo Boxiong (é伯é)
- Guo Chaoren (éè¶ äºº)
- Tang Tianbiao (å天æ )
- Tang Jiaxuan
- Tao Bojun (é¶ä¼¯é§)
- Tao Siju
- Huang Ju
- Huang Qizao (é»å¯çª)
- Huang Zhendong (é»éä¸)
- Cao Gangchuan
- Cao Bochun (æ¹ä¼¯çº¯)
- Sheng Huaren (çåä»)
- Yan Haiwang (éæµ·æº)
- Liang Guanglie (æ¢å ç)
- Wei Jianxing (å°å¥è¡)
- Sui Mingtai (éæå¤ª)
- Wei Fulin (éç¦ä¸´)
- Peng Peiyun (å½ç®äº)
- Jiang Zhuping (èç¥å¹³)
- Han Zhubin
- Cheng Andong (ç¨å®ä¸)
- Cheng Weigao (ç¨ç»´é«)
- Fu Quanyou (å å ¨æ)
- Fu Zhihuan (å å¿å¯°)
- Shu Shengyou (èå£ä½)
- Shu Huiguo (èæ å½)
- Zeng Qinghong
- Zeng Peiyan (æ¾å¹ç)
- Wen Zongren (温å®ä»)
- Wen Jiabao
- Xie Fei (è°¢é)
- Xie Shijie (è°¢ä¸æ°)
- Pu Haiqing (è²æµ·æ¸ )
- Lei Mingqiu (é·é¸£ç)
- Lu Yongxiang (è·¯ç¬ç¥¥)
- Liao Hui (廿)
- Liao Xilong (å»é¡é¾)
- Teng Wensheng (æ»æç)
- Dai Bingguo (æ´ç§å½)
- Dai Xianglong (æ´ç¸é¾)
Brief chronology
- 1st Plenary Session
- Date: September 19, 1997
- Location: Beijing
- Significance: Jiang Zemin was re-appointed General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and Chairman of the Central Military Commission. A 24-members Politburo, a 7-members Politburo Standing Committee and a 7-members Secretariat were elected.
- 2nd Plenary Session
- Date: February 25â26, 1998
- Location: Beijing
- Significance: The meeting approved lists of nominees for top posts of the 9th National People's Congress and the 9th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and a proposal for reforming the State Council.
- 3rd Plenary Session
- Date: October 12â14, 1998
- Location: Beijing
- Significance: The meeting reviewed the previous 20 years of economic reform and set the goal to establish new rural towns according to socialism with Chinese characteristics by 2010.
- 4th Plenary Session
- Date: September 19â22, 1999
- Location: Beijing
- Significance: The reform of the state-owned enterprises was launched aiming at establishing a "modern enterprise system". It emphasized that state ownership should be dominant in "important industries and key areas" and in "backbone enterprises in important industries".[1]:â53â Hu Jintao was appointed vice-chairman of the Central Military Commission.
- 5th Plenary Session
- Date: October 9â11, 2000
- Location: Beijing
- Significance: Premier Zhu Rongji delivered a report on the guidelines for 10th Five-Year Plan, proclaiming modernization, opening up and technological progress as its basic goals. The meeting also decided upon China's accession to the World Trade Organization and urged the Party to apply Jiang Zemin's Three Represents, exposed by the Party General Secretary in February of the same year. The plan for China's western development was formally put forward during the Fifth Plenary Session.[2] :â401â
- 6th Plenary Session
- Date: September 24â26, 2001
- Location: Beijing
- Significance: The meeting celebrated the 80th anniversary of the establishment of the CCP, with General Secretary Jiang Zeming speaking about it, and adopted a Decision of the CCP Central Committee to Strengthen and Improve the Party's Work Style based on the Three Represents, allowing capitalists to join the Party.
- 7th Plenary Session
- Date: November 3â5, 2002
- Location: Beijing
- Significance: Preparations for the Party's 16th National Congress were made. The meeting proclaimed Deng Xiaoping Theory and the Three Represents as the guideline for China "in the new century and new stage of reform and opening up and socialist modernization".