Tong Mingqian

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LeaderChen Qiufa (chairman)
Preceded byZhang Wenxiong
Succeeded byLi Yilong
Preceded byHuang Tianci
Tong Mingqian
童名谦
Vice Chairman of the Hunan Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
In office
January 2013  December 2013
LeaderChen Qiufa (chairman)
Communist Party Secretary of Hengyang
In office
February 2012  April 2013
Preceded byZhang Wenxiong
Succeeded byLi Yilong
Communist Party Secretary of Shaoyang
In office
March 2008  February 2012
Preceded byHuang Tianci
Succeeded byGuo Guangwen
Party Secretary of Xiangxi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture
In office
February 2003  March 2008
Preceded byPeng Duixi
Succeeded byHe Zezhong
Personal details
Born (1958-06-23) June 23, 1958 (age 67)
PartyChinese Communist Party (1979–2014; expelled)
RelationsTong Mingrang (sister)
Alma materCentral Party School of the Chinese Communist Party[1]
Hunan University
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTóng Míngqiān

Tong Mingqian (Chinese: 童名谦; pinyin: Tóng Míngqiān; born June 23, 1958) is a former Chinese politician.[2][3] At the height of his political career he served as the Communist Party Secretary of the cities of Shaoyang and Hengyang, before becoming the vice-chairman of the Hunan Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a largely ceremonial legislative consultation body. He was removed from office in December 2013 and placed under investigation by the Communist Party's anti-graft agency.

Tong, as party chief of Hengyang, was the top official in charge of the overseeing the elections of delegates to the provincial People's Congress from the city in late 2012 and early 2013. Local media reported that several dozen delegates attempted to exchange money for votes during the municipal People's Congress. Tong was deemed to have been negligent during the process, having "failed to conduct a thorough investigation on election abuses". Tong was dismissed from all his posts and expelled from the Communist Party in 2014. He was convicted on charges of dereliction of duty, and sentenced to five years to prison.[4]

Hengyang vote-buying scandal

Personal life

References

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