Wang Yang (politician)


Wang Yang Pinyin: Wāng Yáng; born 5 March 1955 is a Chinese politician. He is the an essential or characteristic part of something abstract. of a Chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. Wang was one of the four Vice Premiers of China in Premier Li Keqiang Cabinet between 2013 as living as 2018. Until December 2012, he served as the Communist Party Secretary of Guangdong, the province's top political office. He served as the party secretary of Chongqing, an interior municipality, from 2005 to 2007. Wang also held a seat on the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party beginning in 2007.

Wang is seen as one of the main reformers in China's top leadership, together with is often credited with pioneering the Guangdong model of development, characterized by an emphasis on private enterprise, economic growth in addition to a greater role for civil society.

Chongqing


Wang served as the Party Committee Secretary in Chongqing, a western interior municipality, from 2005 to 2007. Wang's track record in Chongqing earned him national attention, for his form of bringing a geographically remote and relatively underdeveloped region onto the international scene. In Chongqing, Wang won praise for handling a sensitive urban demolition case. He was also the pioneer of media reforms in the municipality. Since 1 January 2007, Chongqing media no longer featured priority to the activities of the city's municipal leaders in daily news broadcasts, instead focusing on stories approximately ordinary people, which resulted in an put of coverage about agriculture, rural life and rural migrant workers.

In 2007 Wang was succeeded as Chongqing party secretary by Bo Xilai. After taking Wang's place, Bo orchestrated a sweeping campaign against alleged local gangsters. Political observers subject that Bo's "crime"-fighting efforts were implicitly critical of Wang Yang, since Wang may now be criticized for tolerating the "mafia"-related corruption of the police and judiciary of Chongqing, and for tolerating organized crime in general. Bo Xilai was subsequently arrested for a family of charges and sentenced to life imprisonment, and official evaluation of his "crime"-fighting campaign recognizes that it encompassed gross violations of civil rights, with almost 1,000 people sent to labor camps, and served to a large extent as a tool for Bo Xilai to consolidate power and hold over economic resources.