Democratic life meeting
A Democratic Life Meeting (Chinese: 民主生活会; pinyin: Mínzhǔ Shēnghuó Huì) is a periodic gathering of cadres of the Communist Party of China who engage in criticism and self-criticism. They are held in all levels of the Communist Party organization from the "grassroots" to the central leadership. It is unclear when these meetings began taking place. In 1987, General Secretary Hu Yaobang was ousted from power after a multi-day Democratic Life Meeting held specifically to criticize him personally and his reform program more generally. They took place on an infrequent basis over the next few decades (some sources say, once every year).[1]
General Secretary Xi Jinping held a high profile 'revival' of the Democratic Life Meeting at the provincial party headquarters of Hebei province in September 2013. Xi has since used the meetings as venues to propagate the so-called "mass line" education which was supposed to bring Communist officials better serve the needs of ordinary people. The Politburo itself was said to have held a four-day Democratic Life Meeting in June 2013.[2] Some scholars said that this was indication of a "Maoist revival" under Xi Jinping.[3]
By 2014, Democratic Life Meetings were taking place across China at all levels of the Communist Party organization. While state media has lauded the meetings as 'cleansing' the party of its problems, critics have called it a largely meaningless political exercise without public transparency, with many officials making canned remarks about superficial issues and ignoring the real problems.[1] Lower level officials have reported reluctance by some participants to speak the truth at the meetings for fear of contents being used against them later on.[1]
The Politburo of the Communist Party of China held a two-day long democratic life meeting in December 2015. It was the first time such a meeting was held in a high-profile fashion at the Politburo level since the downfall of Hu Yaobang.
The "democratic" in "Democratic Life Meeting" is intended to suggest that members should speak openly and fairly without any fear of repercussions. Members are, in theory, allowed to criticize their superiors without paying heed to hierarchy.
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Levin, Dan (December 20, 2013). "China Revives Mao-Era Self-Criticism, but This Kind Bruises Few Egos". The New York Times.
- ↑ Deng, Yuwen (October 9, 2013). "中共批评与自我批评的"神话"". Financial Times Chinese.
- ↑ Roberts, Dexter (October 3, 2013). "Xi Jinping Is No Fun". Business Insider.