General Secretary of the Communist Party

Leader of a communist party; de facto leader of one-party communist states From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The title of General Secretary or First Secretary is commonly used for the leaders of most communist parties. When a communist party is the ruling party of a communist state, the general secretary is typically the country's de facto leader. Except in Vietnam, it is not uncommon for this leader to also assume state-level positions, such as president or premiership, thereby also becoming the de jure leader of the state. The position of general secretary is typically elected by the communist party's central committee (with the Workers' Party of Korea as an exception), and the holder of this title also serves on the communist party's politburo and secretariat.

General secretaries of ruling communist parties

More information Party, Title ...
Leaders of current ruling communist parties
Party Title Officeholder Took office Length of tenure Ref.
Workers' Party of Korea General Secretary Kim Jong-un 11 April 2012 14 years, 23 days [1]
Chinese Communist Party General Secretary of the Central Committee Xi Jinping 15 November 2012 13 years, 170 days [2]
Lao People's Revolutionary Party General Secretary of the Central Committee Thongloun Sisoulith 15 January 2021 5 years, 109 days [3]
Communist Party of Cuba First Secretary of the Central Committee Miguel Díaz-Canel 19 April 2021 5 years, 15 days [4]
Communist Party of Vietnam General Secretary of the Central Committee Tô Lâm 3 August 2024 1 year, 274 days [5]
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