Yang Jing
Yang Jing | |
---|---|
杨晶 | |
Secretary General of the State Council | |
Assumed office March 2013 | |
Preceded by | Ma Kai |
Chairman of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region | |
In office April 2003 – April 2008 | |
Preceded by | Uyunqimg |
Succeeded by | Bagatur |
Personal details | |
Born | December 1953 Jungar Banner, Inner Mongolia, China |
Political party | Communist Party of China |
Yang Jing (Chinese: 杨晶; pinyin: Yáng Jīng; born December 1953) is a Chinese politician of Mongol ethnicity. He currently serves as a Secretary of the Secretariat of the Communist Party of China, State Councilor, and Secretary General of the State Council, and Chair of the Work Committee of Central Government Departments,[1] and the President of the Chinese Academy of Governance.[2]
Prior to his ascendance to leading roles at the State Council, he served as the Director of the State Ethnic Affairs Commission (2008-2013), and the Chairman of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (2003-2008). Yang is the highest-ranking non-Han official in the Chinese government.
Biography
Yang was born in Jungar Banner in what was Ih Ju League of Inner Mongolia near the modern city of Ordos, and is of ethnic Mongol ancestry. He worked as a teenager in a farming equipment factory. In September 1973 Yang was recommended to obtain higher education at the Inner Mongolia Industry College. He then returned to his hometown to serve in the local Communist Party organization. In 1982 Yang earned a degree in Chinese language from Inner Mongolia University.[1]
After graduating, Yang worked in the Communist Youth League as a local organizer in Ih Ju League, then chief administrator of Dalad Banner. He then went on to work in the Inner Mongolia regional bureau of statistics, then headed the Regional Bureau of Tourism.[3]
Between 1993 and 1996, Yang served as the Inner Mongolia regional chief of the Communist Youth League of China under the League's first secretary Li Keqiang, who later became Premier.[4] In 1998 Yang became party chief of the regional capital, Hohhot, an office he occupied until 2003. Between 2003 and 2008 he served as the Chairman of Inner Mongolia and concurrently the region's Deputy party secretary, alongside Party Secretary Chu Bo. Yang shouldered major responsibility as Inner Mongolia Chairman when a turbine factory in Ulanqab League collapsed in July 2005, killing six workers.[3] He left the office in 2008 to take up his new appointment in Beijing as the head of the State Ethnic Affairs Commission.[4]
Yang Jing earned a seat on the party's Central Secretariat in November 2012, becoming the first ethnic-minority official to sit on the body in the party's history. Several months later at the 12th National People's Congress, Yang was appointed Secretary General of the State Council in Li Keqiang's cabinet.[5] Yang's position was also unique in that State Council Secretaries-General did not usually hold concurrent seats on the party secretariat.[3] He was also the first ethnic-minority official to hold the State Council Secretary-General post.
Yang was a member of the 17th and 18th Central Committees, and an alternate member of the 16th Central Committee.[6] He has been named as a member of the tuanpai, an informal designation given to politicians with background in the Communist Youth League.[3]
References
- ^ a b "Yang Jing". Xinhua.
- ^ "official website". the Chinese Government.
- ^ a b c d "揭秘李克强的"大秘"杨晶". Duowei News. March 17, 2013.
- ^ a b Choi, Chi-yuk (2013-03-08). "Mongol ally of incoming premier to become chief of State Council". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2013-03-08.
- ^ NPC endorses new cabinet lineup
- ^ "Biography of Yang Jing". China Vitae. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
- 1953 births
- Regional leaders in the People's Republic of China
- Living people
- People from Ordos
- Chinese people of Mongolian descent
- People's Republic of China politicians from Inner Mongolia
- Political office-holders in Inner Mongolia
- Communist Party of China politicians from Inner Mongolia
- Members of the Secretariat of the Communist Party of China