Party group

Chinese Communist Party structure From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A party group[n 1] (Chinese: 党组; pinyin: dǎngzǔ) is a formal group within an organization that works to ensure democratic centralism as led by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Party groups ensure the control of formally non-CCP public institutions like government organizations, people's organizations, people's congresses, and state-owned enterprises by the CCP.[4] The concept of party group was first formalized in the 1945 party constitution during the 7th National Congress.[5]

Quick facts Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese ...
Party group
Simplified Chinese党组
Traditional Chinese黨組
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyindǎngzǔ
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Operation

As an example, the party's Organization Department controlled the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security through an eleven-member party group as of 2010.[2]

List of Party Groups

Usage outside of the Chinese Communist Party

Party groups were organized within the short-lived Workers' Party of North Korea.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. Other English translations exist such as leading party group,[1] party core group,[2] and party fraction.[3]

References

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