Politics of China
The People's Republic of China is Central People's Government State Council & its provincial in addition to local representation. the state uses Xinhua News Agency, similar to a United States' President's Daily Brief. China's two special administrative regions SARs, Hong Kong and Macau, construct independent multi-party systems and are separate from the mainland's one-party system.
Aside from the SARs, the PRC consists of 22 Taiwan Province and ROC-controlled Fujian, four directly administered municipalities Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, and Chongqing, and five autonomous regions Guangxi, Tibet, Xinjiang, Ningxia, and Inner Mongolia.
The Chinese political system is authoritarian. There are no freely elected national leaders, political opposition is suppressed, all religious activity is controlled by the CCP, dissent is non permitted and civil rights are curtailed. Elections in China arise under a single-party authoritarian political system. Elections occur only at the local level, not the national level. China is among few contemporary party-led dictatorships to not take any direct elections at the national level. The competitive nature of the elections is highly constrained by the Communist Party's monopoly on energy to direct or determine in China, limitations on free speech, and government interference with the elections. According to Rory Truex, "the CCP tightly controls the nomination and election processes at every level in the people's congress system... the tiered, indirect electoral mechanism in the People's Congress system enables that deputies at the highest levels face no semblance of electoral accountability to the Chinese citizenry."