The Explainer is where we explain an aspect of Chinese life. Simple. So now you know.

Every year at the beginning of March, but delayed until May in 2020 due to the COVID-19 crisis, you might hear a lot about the convening of China’s so-called ‘Two Sessions’ (or Lianghui), that is, the National People’s Congress (NPC) and Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC). This year, the CPPCC will commence on May 21, while the NPC will begin on May 22.

READ MORE: Selfie Sticks Restricted at the Two Sessions



The Two Sessions could be explained as a sort-of equivalent to the US Congress or British Parliament, but that would probably only lead to more confusion due to the blurred line between the Chinese state and the Communist Party.



Indeed, if one looks at the Constitution of the People’s Republic of China, the role of the party is emphasized in the preamble vaguely as leading the government and society, but no details are provided later on as to how this operates.

From reading the document, one gets a fairly ‘normal’ picture from a ‘Western’ perspective. As is standard in a semi-presidential republic (like France or Russia), the president is the head of state and the prime minister (or, in this case, premier) is the head of government.

In China, the premier chairs the State Council, with all ministries and state agencies under it; the Supreme People’s Court and Supreme People’s Procuracy are essentially equivalents to the US Supreme Court and Attorney General’s Office, respectively; and the National People’s Congress is supposed to be the legislative branch. According to the document, the NPC is the “highest organ of state power.”

But if you ask an academic, or a regular Chinese person, they’d explain to you that the constitution is, essentially, just... words. In fact, the party is truly in charge, and since almost every civil servant is a party member (there actually are other parties, more on that later), we need to first explain how that works.

Who’s Really in Charge?



Screengrab via Sbs.com



To answer that question, we first need to know who’s the head honcho. The current consensus is that the leader of the PRC is whoever holds these three posts: President (head of state), General Secretary of the Communist Party (head of party) and Chairman of the Central Military Commission (commander-in-chief of the armed forces). Xi Jinping, Hu Jintao and Jiang Zemin all held (or in President Xi’s case, holds) these three titles, and such is the way the leadership has been organized for almost three decades.

Now, who makes laws? This is complicated, since China doesn’t have a clear-cut rule of law system like most liberal democratic systems. The leader or State Council can issue directives that have the force of law. This is where the NPC comes in, right?

Nope.

This is where the Chinese Communist Party (or Communist Party of China, their preferred translation) comes in. With more than 90 million members, it is the largest political organization in the world. Its main arm is the Central Committee (CC), with hundreds of members that meet once a year (like the NPC, but later, during the fall).

Here we can really talk about a legislative branch, since the CC actually promulgates laws and policies, such as the (now abandoned) One-Child Policy, the beginning of the Reform and Opening-up, or any of China's 'five-year plans.'

But above the CC is the Politburo, the executive branch of the party, with 25 members (the elite of national leadership), and above that is the Standing Committee of the Politburo; with anything between five to 11 members historically, and seven currently, it is the creme de la creme, the top decision-makers of the nation.

Their decisions, upon endorsement by the CC, go on to be turned into law by the NPC. And they all hold top state positions, with the president/secretary/chairman, the premier, the VP and the chair of the NPC all being members of the Politburo.

What Exactly is the NPC?



Image via Voice of America Chinese



So, back to the NPC. This is a state institution, composed of delegates elected by provincial people’s congresses. ‘Elections?’ You say. But how? Well, yes, there are elections, but they’re not the same across the board. At the lowest level (county and township congresses), representatives are elected directly by the citizenry; but at every level above that, each congress is elected by the ones directly below it, all the way to the NPC.

With 2,987 representatives of the popular masses, it is the largest parliamentary body on Earth. It meets for two weeks in March and, essentially, turns the party’s wishes into law.

Yes, it’s a rubber-stamp.

But how, if it elects the state leadership? The president, chair of the Central Military Commission, chief justice, etc. are all elected by the NPC’s delegates, and even the premier, appointed by the president, has to be confirmed by them. The truth is, though, by the time they vote the party has already decided all of these outcomes. Xi, for example, was elected in 2013 with 2,952 votes for, one against and three abstentions.

While in recent years there has been increasingly more room for policy debate and some form of vitality in this body, it still exerts little real influence on legislation. Factionalism does exist, but it is confined to the party, in what is called “intra-party democracy.”

A notable remnant of Lenin’s democratic centralism, it means that there is a variety of political and economic stances within the party which are confronted in a lively forum of ideas, but that once a decision is made, it must be adhered to and unquestioned by the entire membership.

The NPC does have some claim to pluralism, though, since the Communist Party only holds 2,157 seats... the other 830 belonging to the United Front.*

Wait a Minute... China isn’t a One Party State?



Image via CGTN



What the hell? Since when is China not a one-party state?



Basically, the United Front is an amalgam of kinda leftist parties that existed prior to 1949 and supported the communist revolution. So they get some mostly meaningless representation in a mostly meaningless institution.

And let’s not get into the National Party Congresses, which convene every five years and elect a new Central Committee and are a pretty big deal since they pass the torch from one generation of leadership to the next.**

So, okay, the NPC is a rubber-stamp and the party really makes the laws, which are implemented by the state. Every level of administration, from provincial government to colleges, has a state and party official (like, the Mayor of Shanghai and the Shanghai Party Secretary), of which the party one is always more powerful.

And What About the CPPCC?



Image via Newsgd.com



But then what exactly is the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference?

It’s the NPC’s advisory body, a counterpart supposed to represent civil society. In effect, that means influential businessmen, representatives from the United Front, trade unions, ethnic groups and other organizations, as well as some prominent thinkers (the last emperor of China, Pu Yi, actually came to be part of the CPPCC later in his life). It has no decision-making power, and only exists as an expression of the people’s will and allows the NPC to ‘make decisions’ more inclusive and pluralistic.

So Then What’s the Point of the Two Sessions?



Image via Sina



You might be wondering why a rubber-stamp and an advisory board meeting for a mere two weeks matters at all? Well, to quote TIME, “it’s basically the entire class of China’s political elite convening in Beijing for the next few weeks.”

So, it serves as a great window into Chinese politics, as it reveals to us its key players and what their priorities are for the coming year. The Korean Peninsula, pollution, US-China relations and, it is safe to say, the COVID-19 crises will be among the many topics addressed by the leadership, and the premier inaugurates it with a prognostic of the year to come.

The Congress also votes to approve the annual budget. So, some things do get done.



Mostly though, it means your VPN might not work for a few weeks.

* As of March 2013.

** Usually.

This article was originally published in March 2016. It has been updated and republished on May 20, 2020.

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