Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress
View on WikipediaThis article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2016) |

Key Information

The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) is the permanent organ of the National People's Congress (NPC), the national legislature of the People's Republic of China. It exercises the powers of the NPC when it is not in session.
The NPCSC is composed of a chairman, vice chairpersons, a secretary-general, and regular members, all of whom are elected by regular NPC sessions. The day-to-day operations of the Standing Committee are handled by the Council of Chairpersons, which is composed of the chairman, vice chairpersons, and the secretary-general. Although the parent NPC officially has superiority over the Standing Committee, and certain authorities are not delegated, the Standing Committee is generally viewed to have more de facto power, as the NPC convenes only once a year for two weeks, leaving its Standing Committee the only organ that regularly drafts and approves decisions and laws.
History
[edit]In 1954, the 1st National People's Congress was held in Beijing, which became the statutory parliament of the People's Republic of China. The Standing Committee was established as its permanent organ. The 1954 Constitution of the People's Republic of China stipulates that "the National People's Congress is the sole organ that exercises the legislative power of the state" and that the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress has only the power to "interpret laws" and "enact decrees". However, because the number of delegates to the National People's Congress is in the thousands and non-full-time, only one meeting is held annually, and the meeting period cannot be too long. The 2nd NPC authorized its Standing Committee the power to exercise legislative power when the NPC is not in session.[5][non-primary source needed]
For a while after establishment of the People's Republic, the power of the Standing Committee was limited to interpretation of its constitution and laws. At present, the NPC Standing Committee plays a key role in legislation and has the power to promulgate and amend most laws and decrees. Bills voted on by the National People's Congress are usually submitted by the Standing Committee after its third reading.
During the political chaos of the Cultural Revolution, the NPC rarely held meetings and the Standing Committee virtually ceased to function. During this period, Chairman Zhu De and First Vice Chairman Dong Biwu had both died, which enabled Vice Chairman Soong Ching-ling, a member of the Revolutionary Committee of the Kuomintang, to exercise the functions and powers of Chairman of the NPCSC to a certain extent. With the abolition of the presidency in 1975, she effectively became the first female head of state in China by legal definition.
In 1980, after the decision of the 5th National People's Congress, the "Committee for the Amendment of the Constitution of the People's Republic of China" was formally established, presided over by Ye Jianying, Soong Ching Ling and Peng Zhen, and including the main leaders of the democratic parties, social organizations and jurists. It was responsible for amending and establishing the new constitution. During the discussion on constitutional amendment, Hu Qiaomu, secretary general of the Constitution Revision Committee, proposed cutting the number of NPC deputies to 1,000 and setting up two chambers of 500 each under the NPC to make the NPC a permanent, bicameral organ, in an attempt to change its image as a "rubber stamp". Another committee member proposed to imitate the system used by the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union with one chamber composed of representatives from different regions and the other composed of representatives from different professional sectors. Opponents, led by Deng Xiaoping and Ye Jianying, argued that "if the two parties disagree, it will be very troublesome to coordinate and difficult to operate". A compromise was finally reached that greatly expanded the powers of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, making it a permanent legislature with the power to enact most laws and to review those for approval by the NPC.[6][unreliable source?]
Composition
[edit]The NPCSC currently has 175 members, and consists of a chairman, vice chairpersons, a secretary-general, and regular members.[7] The chairman presides over the NPCSC, and presides and convenes its work. The chairman has conventionally been one of the top members of the Chinese Communist Party, ranking as either the second-ranking or third-ranking member of the Politburo Standing Committee since 1998.[8] The chairman, vice chairpersons and the secretary-general collectively make up the Council of Chairpersons, which handles the Standing Committee's daily affairs.[9] Members of the NPCSC must not, at the same time, hold executive, judicial, or supervisory positions. Other members of the NPC do not have this restriction.[9][non-primary source needed] The Leading Party Members Group comprises the chairman and vice chairpersons who are CCP members, and is responsible for the implementation of the CCP Central Committee's policies.[10]
Election
[edit]The Standing Committee is elected by and from the NPC delegates during a NPC plenary session.[11] The candidates for the NPCSC chairperson, vice chairpersons, secretary-general, and regular members are nominally nominated by the NPC Presidium, though the nomination process is effectively controlled by the CCP.[11] Elections for the non-regular NPCSC members, along with all other NPC elections are not competitive, with a single candidate proposed by the Presidium. In contrast, the elections for the regular NPCSC members have been the only competitive elections in the NPC since 1988; there are more nominees than available seats.[11]
Administrative bodies
[edit]A number of administrative bodies have also been established under the Standing Committee to provide support for the day-to-day operation of the NPC. These include:[12]
Functions and powers
[edit]Legislative
[edit]The NPC and its Standing Committee jointly exercise the power to enact laws in China. The legislative functions of the Standing Committee constitutionally include: drafting and revising laws except those to be enacted only by the full congress of the NPC; partially supplementing and amending, when the NPC is not in session, laws enacted by the NPC, provided that the basic principles of these laws are not contravened.[13] As a result, day-to-day legislative work is conducted by the Standing Committee.[14] Although the NPC has the power to revoke "inappropriate decisions" made by the Standing Committee, so far this power has never been used. As a result, the NPC Standing Committee often has a greater say in legislative deliberations.
The NPCSC has the power of judicial interpretation of the constitution and law in the PRC,[9] including the Basic Law of Hong Kong and Macau. In contrast to common law jurisdiction in which stare decisis gives the power of both final interpretation and adjudication to a supreme court, within mainland China constitutional and legal interpretation is considered to be a legislative activity rather than a judicial one, and the functions are split so that the NPCSC provides legal interpretations while the Supreme People's Court actually decides cases. Because an interpretation of the NPCSC is legislative in nature and not judicial, it does not affect cases which have already been decided.
| Standing Committee of the National People's Congress | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simplified Chinese | 全国人民代表大会常务委员会 | ||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 全國人民代表大會常務委員會 | ||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
| Officially abbreviated as | |||||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 全国人大常委会 | ||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 全國人大常委會 | ||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
Supervisory
[edit]The NPC Standing Committee has the power to supervise the enforcement of the Constitution. It supervises the work of the State Council, the Central Military Commission of the PRC, the National Supervisory Commission, the Supreme People's Court and the Supreme People's Procuratorate. It has the power to annul administrative regulations, decisions and orders of the State Council that go against the Constitution and other legislative acts of the NPC and itself, and to annul local regulations or decisions of the organs of state power of provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the central government that contravene the Constitution, other laws or administrative regulations of all levels of government, especially national.
Power to decide upon major state issues
[edit]When the NPC is not in session, the Standing Committee examines and approves partial adjustments to the plan for national economic and social development or to the state budget that prove necessary in the course of their implementation. The Standing Committee decides whether to ratify or abrogate treaties and important agreements reached with other countries. It institutes systems of titles and ranks for military and diplomatic personnel, and other specific titles and ranks, state medals and titles of honor as well as the granting of special pardons.
The NPCSC decides on general or partial mobilization, and on entering into a state of emergency throughout China or in particular provinces, autonomous regions or municipalities directly under the central government. When the NPC is not in session, the Standing Committee decides whether to proclaim a state of war in the event of an armed attack on China or in fulfillment of international treaty obligations concerning a common defense against aggression.[13][non-primary source needed]
Meetings and procedures
[edit]The term of office of a member of the NPC Standing Committee is the same as that of the current NPC, and is generally five years. It remains in power until the succeeding NPC elects its standing committee.[15] It convenes the NPC once a year, and may do so when it finds it necessary or with a proposal from one fifth of NPC's members.
The NPC Standing Committee usually holds a committee session once every two months, usually late in even-numbered months, with each session of the committee lasting a week.[16] It may also hold interim sessions if there is a special need. The meetings are convened and chaired by the chairperson. The chairperson may delegate a vice chairperson to preside over a committee session on his or her behalf. Sessions of the Standing Committee may not be held unless a quorum is met of more than half of the members of the Standing Committee present. The Council of Chairpersons shall draft the session agenda of the Standing Committee for the period pertaining and refer it to a plenary session of the Standing Committee for a decision.[15]
According to law, a bill may be proposed by the Chairperson's Council, or submitted to the committee by the State Council, the Central Military Commission, the Supreme People's Court, the Supreme People's Procuratorate and deputies of the special committees of the National People's Congress (or the committee chairmen of these). Ten or more deputies of the Standing Committee may also sign and introduce a bill. After the bill is introduced, the Chairman's Council shall decide on the agenda of the ongoing session of the Standing Committee. The Chairman's Council may refer the bill to the relevant special committee for deliberation and submit a report before deciding to put it on the agenda of the Standing Committee either for the current session or in forthcoming sessions. It also has the right to vote to reject the bill proposed by the above-mentioned organ. When the Chairman's Council rejects a bill, it shall explain the reasons to the Standing Committee and the bill sponsor.[citation needed]
A bill put on the agenda of a Standing Committee session shall be deliberated by the Standing Committee for three times before it is submitted to a vote by deputies. At the first reading, an explanation of the legislative bill made by its sponsor shall be heard in a plenary session of the Standing Committee and then it shall be preliminarily deliberated at group meetings by deputies in the period between sessions. At the second reading, a report of the Constitution and Law Committee on the revision of the draft law and main problems concerned shall be heard in a plenary session, and then the legislative bill shall be further deliberated at group meetings. At the third reading, a report of the aforementioned committee on the results of its deliberation over the draft law shall be heard in another plenary session, and then the revised draft of the law shall be deliberated at group meetings for any final changes. After the revised draft law has been deliberated during sessions of the Standing Committee, the Constitution and Law Committee revises it in accordance with the deliberation opinions of the Standing Committee members and prepares the final version to be voted on. The Council of chairpersons then refers the legislative bill to the Standing Committee for a vote. If the Standing Committee fails to reach an agreement on the bill during the third reading, it shall convene joint group meetings and additional plenary sessions for further discussion, or invite relevant personages, experts and scholars to hold hearings regarding the bill before either the whole of the committee or within groups. After reaching an agreement, it is sent for the vote in a plenary session.[17][better source needed]
For a bill that has been put on the agenda of the session of the Standing Committee, after each deliberation of the session of the Standing Committee, the draft law and the explanation of its drafting and amendment will be published on the website of the People's Republic of China or the Chinese Government Legal Information Network for public comment.[citation needed]
When voting, the NPC Standing Committee session adopts the absolute majority system, that is, more than half of the committee members present in a session thus producing a quorum, and more than half of the committee members voted in favor, then the bill can be passed. When an affirmative vote and an abstention vote are equal, the chairman has no right to cast a decision vote, and the bill is vetoed.[citation needed]
In fact, although most of the bills deliberated by the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) have been agreed upon at the third reading, there are still some bills that have been rejected at the voting stage in the history of the Standing Committee of the NPC. For example, in 1989, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress vetoed the Organic Law of the Urban Residents Committees of the People's Republic of China (Draft) due to different opinions on the wording of the provisions of the bill. For example, in 1999, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress rejected the Highway Law of the People's Republic of China (Amendment) with 77 votes in favor, 6 against, 42 abstentions and 29 people not participating in the voting, which was just 50% of the total votes.[17][better source needed]
Cases
[edit]Regulations on Hong Kong
[edit]A notable use of the constitutional interpretation power occurred in 1999 over the right of abode issue in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region in Lau Kong Yung v. Director of Immigration.[18] The NPCSC interpreted the Basic Law of Hong Kong in accordance with the position taken by the Hong Kong government with respect to the eligibility of permanent residency in Hong Kong.
In 2014, the NPCSC set rules for the election of the chief executive of Hong Kong, a decision that was widely opposed by the pro-democracy camp and led to the Umbrella Revolution.[19]
In 2016, the NPCSC ruled that Hong Kong lawmakers who take their oath improperly could be immediately disqualified.[20]
In June 2020, the NPCSC created and passed the Hong Kong National Security Law, legislation that was kept secret until shortly before it took effect.[21] In November 2020, Carrie Lam sought help from the NPCSC to give authority for the Hong Kong government to disqualify 4 pro-democracy lawmakers from the Legislative Council.[22]
In December 2020, it was reported that the NPCSC would move to diminish opposition from district councillors, by unseating those who "breached the red line" and also by removing the 117 seats belonging to district councillors in the chief executive election committee.[23] Earlier in December 2019, Carrie Lam said that the opposition district councillors would be treated the same as those from the pro-Beijing camp, and that "There is no question of the government's commitment to continue to respect the roles and functions of the district council."[23]
In March 2021, the NPCSC approved changes to Hong Kong's electoral system, allowing only "patriots" to serve in the government, and also reducing democratic representation.[24]
In December 2022, after John Lee asked the NPCSC whether Jimmy Lai could hire a foreign lawyer, the NPCSC ruled that foreign lawyers could only be hired for national security cases if approved by the chief executive or by the Committee for Safeguarding National Security.[25]
Chairman and vice chairpersons of the 14th NPCSC
[edit]Elected by the 14th National People's Congress at its 1st session:
- Chairman
-
- Zhao Leji (b. March 1957): 3rd-ranked member of the Politburo Standing Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.
- Vice chairpersons (14)
- Li Hongzhong (b. August 1956): member of the CCP Politburo
- Wang Dongming (b. July 1956)
- Xiao Jie (b. June 1957)
- Zheng Jianbang (b. January 1957): chairman of the Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang.
- Ding Zhongli (b. January 1957): chairman of the China Democratic League.
- Hao Mingjin (b. December 1956): chairman of the China National Democratic Construction Association.
- Cai Dafeng (b. June 1960): chairman of the China Association for Promoting Democracy.
- He Wei (b. December 1955): chairman of the Chinese Peasants' and Workers' Democratic Party.
- Wu Weihua (b. September 1956): chairman of Jiusan Society.
- Tie Ning (b. September 1957): chair of the China Federation of Literary and Art Circles, and of the Chinese Writers Association.
- Peng Qinghua (b. April 1957)
- Zhang Qingwei (b. November 1961)
- Losang Jamcan (b. July 1957): member of the 18th CCCPC; the former chairman of the Standing Committee of the Tibet Autonomous Region People's Congress, and the Chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region.
- Shohrat Zakir (b. August 1953): former chairman of Xinjiang.
See also
[edit]- Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, a Soviet Union institution, after which Standing Committee of the NPC was modelled.
- Standing Committee of the Supreme People's Assembly of North Korea
- Council of State of Cuba
- Standing Committee of the National Assembly of Vietnam
Further reading
[edit]- Truex, Rory (2016). Making Autocracy Work: Representation and Responsiveness in Modern China. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107172432.
- Mackerras, Colin; McMillen, Donald; Watson, Andrew (2001). Dictionary of the Politics of the People's Republic of China. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415250672.
References
[edit]- ^ National People's Congress of the PRC. 中华人民共和国全国人民代表大会和地方各级人民代表大会选举法 [Election Law of the National People's Congress and Local People's Congress of the People 's Republic of China]. www.npc.gov.cn (in Chinese (China)). Archived from the original on 13 June 2017. Retrieved 18 June 2017.
- ^ "Electoral Law of the National People's Congress and Local People's Congresses of the People's Republic of China". National People's Congress. 29 August 2015. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
- ^ "China's Electoral System". State Council of the People's Republic of China. 2014-08-25. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
- ^ "IX. The Election System". China.org.cn. China Internet Information Center. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
- ^ "全国人民代表大会为什么要设立常委会?". 中国人大网 (in Chinese (China)). 2000-11-30. Archived from the original on 2017-09-14. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
- ^ Tencent News (2011). "共和国辞典第44期:八二宪法". Tencent Net History (in Chinese (China)). Archived from the original on 2016-08-16. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
- ^ "National People's Congress Organizational System". China Internet Information Center. Archived from the original on 16 November 2014. Retrieved 26 April 2014.
- ^ Truex 2016, p. 53.
- ^ a b c "Constitution of the People's Republic of China". National People's Congress. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
- ^ 徐高峰,中国共产党在人大设立党组的前前后后,红广角2014(9):38-41
- ^ a b c Liao, Zewei (2023-03-04). "NPC 2023: How China Selects Its State Leaders for the Next Five Years". NPC Observer. Retrieved 2023-11-03.
- ^ Wei, Changhao (2018-03-15). "Bilingual NPC Organizational Chart". NPC Observer. Retrieved 2024-04-04.
- ^ a b "Functions and Powers of the Standing Commitee [sic]". www.npc.gov.cn. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
- ^ Truex 2016, p. 51.
- ^ a b "FAQs: National People's Congress and Its Standing Committee". NPC Observer. 4 May 2023. Archived from the original on 3 November 2023. Retrieved 2023-11-03.
- ^ Li, Cheng (2016-10-18). Chinese Politics in the Xi Jinping Era: Reassessing Collective Leadership. Brookings Institution Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-8157-2694-4.
- ^ a b "全国人大常委会关于实行宪法宣誓制度的决定". People's Daily. Archived from the original on 2016-12-22. Retrieved 2015-07-01.
- ^ "FACV Nos 10 and 11 of 1999". Judiciary of Hong Kong. 3 December 1999. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
- ^ "Hong Kong's self-styled 'voice of reason' says Beijing-imposed electoral shake-up is 'the worst' things will get for the city". Hong Kong Free Press. 2021-04-05. Retrieved 2021-04-07.
- ^ Wong, Brian; Lam, Jeffie; Cheng, Lilian (2022-11-28). "Hong Kong to ask Beijing to interpret national security law after Jimmy Lai victory". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
- ^ "Hong Kong leader demands international respect for the national security law". South China Morning Post. 2020-06-30. Retrieved 2020-11-12.
- ^ Lau, Stuart (2020-11-12). "EU accuses China of dealing 'severe blow' to Hong Kong political freedoms". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2020-11-12.
- ^ a b "Beijing planning crackdown on Hong Kong's district councillors, a year after pro-democracy landslide - report". Hong Kong Free Press. 2020-12-23. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
- ^ Ho, Kelly (2021-03-30). "Beijing unanimously approves Hong Kong election overhaul, reducing democratic representation". Hong Kong Free Press. Retrieved 2021-03-30.
- ^ "'Get approval for foreign lawyers in NSL cases'". RTHK. Retrieved 2022-12-31.
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress
View on GrokipediaHistorical Development
Establishment and Constitutional Basis
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) was formally established during the First Session of the First National People's Congress, held from September 15 to 27, 1954, in Beijing.[7][8] This session marked the inaugural convening of the NPC as China's highest organ of state power, following the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949.[9] The NPCSC was elected by the NPC delegates at this session to serve as its permanent body, enabling continuous legislative and supervisory functions outside the NPC's infrequent plenary meetings.[1] Its initial composition included a chairman (Liu Shaoqi), several vice-chairmen, a secretary-general, and members, totaling around 50 individuals, reflecting the centralized structure intended to operationalize the NPC's authority.[10] The constitutional basis for the NPCSC originates in the 1954 Constitution of the People's Republic of China, adopted unanimously on September 20, 1954, during the same NPC session.[8][7] Chapter III of this constitution (Articles 27–34) delineated the NPCSC's composition, election by the NPC, and core powers, including interpreting the constitution, enacting decrees when the NPC was not in session, supervising the State Council and other state organs, and appointing senior officials.[11] This framework positioned the NPCSC as an extension of the NPC's sovereignty, embodying the principle of democratic centralism under Communist Party leadership, though in practice, its operations have been shaped by party directives rather than independent deliberation.[9] Subsequent constitutions in 1975, 1978, and 1982 reaffirmed and refined this basis, with the current 1982 Constitution (as amended) in Article 67 vesting the NPCSC with expanded legislative, interpretive, and oversight roles to address governance needs amid economic reforms.[12] These provisions ensure the NPCSC's permanence across five-year NPC terms, with elections occurring at each NPC's first session.[4]Evolution Through Key Eras
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) began functioning shortly after its establishment under the 1954 Constitution, convening regular sessions to deliberate and pass legislation in alignment with Chinese Communist Party (CCP) priorities, such as agrarian reforms and state organization laws during the 1950s. It operated as the primary legislative body between NPC sessions, with Chairman Zhu De presiding over approximately 20 meetings in the first decade, though its decisions consistently reflected CCP directives rather than independent deliberation.[13][10] The Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) severely disrupted the NPCSC's operations, as the NPC itself rarely convened and the Standing Committee effectively ceased to function amid widespread political purges and the prioritization of Maoist mass campaigns over institutional processes. Legislative authority shifted toward ad hoc revolutionary committees, rendering the NPCSC dormant until the political stabilization following Mao's death in 1976.[14] Revival occurred under Deng Xiaoping's leadership post-1978, with the 5th NPC electing a reconstituted Standing Committee that resumed regular meetings and began enacting foundational laws, including the 1979 Organic Law of Local People's Congresses and People's Governments. Deng's reforms sought partial separation of party and state roles, enabling the NPCSC to assume more structured legislative and supervisory functions on paper, though empirical control remained firmly with the CCP Politburo. The 1982 Constitution formalized these powers, granting the NPCSC authority to interpret laws and oversee the State Council, marking a shift toward institutionalized governance amid economic liberalization.[14][13] During the Jiang Zemin (1989–2002) and Hu Jintao (2002–2012) eras, the NPCSC expanded its output, passing over 200 laws and amendments focused on market reforms, foreign investment, and administrative streamlining, with session frequency increasing to bimonthly by the 2000s. This period saw incremental enhancements in procedural transparency, such as public consultations on select bills, but the body's role stayed subordinate to CCP policy-setting, with membership selections dictated by party elites.[10] In the Xi Jinping era (2012–present), the NPCSC has intensified activity, convening more than 60 sessions per term and enacting laws on national security, cybersecurity, and civil code revisions to support centralized governance. While legislative volume has risen—handling over 100 bills annually—reforms have emphasized alignment with Xi's "comprehensive national rejuvenation," curtailing autonomous oversight and reinforcing CCP dominance through mechanisms like the 2018 supervisory law integrating party discipline into state functions.[15][16]Reforms Under Xi Jinping Era
During Xi Jinping's tenure as General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, commencing in November 2012, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) experienced institutional adjustments primarily via constitutional revisions that augmented its formal supervisory roles while reinforcing subordination to Party leadership. These changes emphasized alignment with "Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era," incorporated into guiding documents and work protocols.[17][18] The most significant structural reform materialized through the March 11, 2018, constitutional amendment, ratified at the first session of the 13th NPC following NPCSC review. This abolished the two-term limit for the President and Vice President, facilitating indefinite tenure for incumbents, and established the National Supervisory Commission as a dedicated anti-corruption body consolidating prior fragmented efforts. The NPCSC was explicitly empowered to oversee the Commission's operations, including hearing its reports and annulling decisions deemed unlawful, while the full NPC gained authority to appoint and remove its director; these provisions operationalized from March 20, 2018, via the Supervision Law, which the NPCSC promulgated and later amended in June 2024 to refine supervisory measures like team dispatches and investigative powers.[19][20][21] Constitutional supervision mechanisms also evolved, with the 2018 amendment reconstituting a legislative committee into the NPC Constitution and Law Committee, subordinate to the NPCSC, to handle reviews of bills and regulations for constitutional conformity. Post-amendment decisions expanded filing-and-review systems, enabling the Committee to assess local enactments and recommend corrections, culminating in the NPCSC's inaugural annual report on constitutional enforcement delivered in March 2024, which highlighted 22 reviews of norms for compliance. These procedures, formalized around 2018-2020, prioritize Party-approved interpretations over adversarial adjudication.[22][23][24] Operationally, NPCSC sessions under Xi have prioritized legislation advancing CPC priorities, such as national security laws and the 2020 Civil Code, with the body drafting 51 bills during the 12th and 13th NPC terms (2013-2023), reversing earlier trends of delegated drafting. Work reports from 2018 onward underscore unwavering adherence to the Party Central Committee's authority, with Xi's core position as a foundational principle; analysts attribute this to a consolidation of personalistic rule, diminishing any nascent institutional autonomy gained in prior decades.[25][26][6][16]Composition and Selection
Membership Structure and Qualifications
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) is structured as the permanent organ of the NPC, comprising a chairman, several vice chairmen (typically 14), a secretary-general, and regular members. For the 14th NPCSC, elected on March 13, 2023, during the first session of the 14th NPC, the total membership stands at 159 individuals.[1] This body operates under the Council of the Chairmen, which includes the chairman, vice chairmen, and secretary-general, responsible for handling day-to-day administrative affairs between plenary sessions.[1] Members of the NPCSC are elected exclusively from among the deputies of the NPC itself, requiring a simple majority vote in a secret ballot at the NPC's first session following each five-year electoral cycle.[1] The term of office aligns with that of the NPC, spanning five years, during which members cannot concurrently serve in the State Council's administrative organs, the supervisory organs, or the judicial and procuratorial organs.[1] The chairman and vice chairmen are restricted to no more than two consecutive terms in their respective positions.[1] Formal qualifications emphasize political loyalty and ideological alignment, as outlined in the Rules for Component Members of the Standing Committee, adopted on April 26, 2023. These rules mandate that members uphold the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC), conscientiously study Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era, and safeguard the authority of the Constitution and laws.[27] Members must perform duties with integrity, maintain close ties with the public, participate diligently in deliberations and voting, and avoid any interference in judicial or procuratorial activities.[27] No explicit criteria for age, education, or professional background are stipulated beyond these political and ethical standards, though appropriate representation is ensured for ethnic minorities among the membership.[1] In practice, candidate selection is tightly controlled by CPC mechanisms, ensuring alignment with party directives prior to NPC endorsement.[27]Election and Appointment Mechanisms
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (SCNPC) is elected by the National People's Congress (NPC) from among its deputies during the first session of each new NPC, which convenes every five years following nationwide elections for NPC deputies.[1][28] This election occurs shortly after the NPC's opening, typically in March, as seen in the 14th NPC's first session on March 5-11, 2023, when 159 members were elected to serve from March 2023 onward.[1] The process is governed by the Organic Law of the NPC, which stipulates that members must be drawn exclusively from NPC deputies to ensure alignment with the parent body's composition.[28] The SCNPC comprises a chairman, vice-chairmen, secretary-general, and regular members, with the total number not exceeding 300 as per Article 67 of the 1982 Constitution (amended 2018).[29] For the 14th SCNPC (2023-2028), the body includes 175 members, comprising 16 in the Council of Chairpersons (the chairman, 14 vice-chairmen, and secretary-general) and 159 rank-and-file members.[4] Elections for these positions require a simple majority of NPC deputies, conducted via secret ballot, though the Constitution specifies that the chairman, vice-chairmen, and secretary-general are elected or recalled by more than half of all deputies under Article 65.[29] No member may concurrently hold positions in state administrative, supervisory, judicial, or procuratorial organs, preserving separation from executive functions.[1] The chairman and vice-chairmen are limited to two consecutive terms.[29] In practice, candidates for SCNPC positions, including leadership roles, are nominated by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) prior to NPC sessions, reflecting the party's dominant role in personnel selection within the people's congress system.[10] This nomination process ensures alignment with CPC policy priorities, as the NPC functions under the principle of democratic centralism outlined in Article 6 of the Organic Law, where majority decisions bind all deputies after deliberation.[30] While formal elections occur, the pre-selection by CPC organs limits competitive elements, with near-unanimous approval rates observed in recent sessions, such as the 2023 election where Zhao Leji was elected chairman.[1][31] The outgoing SCNPC continues exercising powers until its successor is elected, ensuring continuity.[32]Internal Administrative Organs
The internal administrative organs of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) are structured to support its ongoing operations between full NPC sessions, with the General Office serving as the central administrative body. Directed by the secretary-general, the General Office manages routine tasks including staff recruitment and assignment, budget allocation for committee activities, organization of bimonthly plenary sessions, and logistical coordination for meetings held primarily in Beijing's Great Hall of the People.[33][34] As of the 14th NPCSC (elected March 2023), the General Office comprises multiple departments handling internal affairs, such as document processing and inter-agency liaison, ensuring continuity in the committee's 170-member apparatus.[4] Overseeing these functions is the Council of Chairpersons, an informal leadership group comprising the chairperson (currently Zhao Leji, elected March 10, 2023), 13 vice chairpersons, and the secretary-general, which determines session agendas, routes draft legislation, and nominates personnel for subordinate roles.[34] This council, convening as needed, exercises de facto executive authority over administrative decisions, reflecting the centralized decision-making inherent in the NPCSC's design under the 1982 Constitution (amended 2018).[35] Specialized subordinate commissions further bolster administrative efficiency, including the Credentials Committee, which verifies the eligibility of NPC delegates and Standing Committee members during elections, as seen in its review of over 2,900 deputies for the 14th NPC in 2023.[34] The Legislative Affairs Commission, with around 100 staff as of recent reports, supports administrative aspects of law drafting by conducting legal research, soliciting expert input, and preparing interpretive documents, processing an average of 20-30 bills per year for NPCSC deliberation.[36] Other bodies, such as the Budgetary Affairs Commission, oversee fiscal reporting and audits of state revenues (e.g., approving the 2024 central budget of 28.55 trillion yuan), integrating administrative oversight with supervisory duties.[4] These organs operate under strict confidentiality protocols, with decisions ratified by NPCSC votes requiring a simple majority among attending members.[35] This structure, evolved from the 1954 Organic Law of the NPC, emphasizes hierarchical control to align with Chinese Communist Party guidance, as evidenced by the Politburo's influence over key appointments—seven of the 14th NPCSC's top leaders hold concurrent CCP Central Committee Politburo seats as of 2023.[10] While official NPC sources detail these bodies' roles, independent analyses note their limited autonomy due to party oversight, prioritizing policy implementation over independent administration.[34]Powers and Responsibilities
Legislative Authority
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (SCNPC) exercises the state's legislative power jointly with the full National People's Congress (NPC), as provided under Article 58 of the Constitution of the People's Republic of China.[37] This authority enables the SCNPC to handle the majority of legislative activities between the NPC's infrequent plenary sessions, which typically convene twice annually.[38] Under Article 67 of the Constitution and the Legislation Law of the People's Republic of China, the SCNPC is authorized to enact, amend, and repeal statutes other than those reserved exclusively for the NPC, including amendments to the Constitution itself and basic laws governing criminal offenses, civil relations, and state institutions.[39][40] The Legislation Law further specifies that the NPC formulates and amends foundational legal frameworks, while the SCNPC addresses ordinary laws and administrative regulations, ensuring continuity in lawmaking.[41] In practice, the SCNPC conducts multiple sessions per year to deliberate and pass legislation, often drafting bills on economic, social, and administrative matters. For instance, it adopted the Anti-Organized Crime Law in December 2021, marking China's first dedicated statute against organized crime.[42] Since 2021, the NPC and SCNPC together have formulated 36 new laws and revised 63 existing ones, with the SCNPC responsible for routine enactments such as the Atomic Energy Law, Public Health Emergency Response Law, and National Parks Law passed in September 2025.[43][44] Over the preceding year to March 2025, the SCNPC specifically formulated six new laws and revised 14 others.[45] The SCNPC's legislative role extends to approving partial adjustments to the national economic plan and budget when the NPC is not in session, subject to later NPC review.[46] This mechanism underscores its operational primacy in sustaining China's legal framework amid the NPC's limited meeting schedule.[47]Supervisory and Interpretive Functions
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) is vested with the power to interpret the Constitution of the People's Republic of China and national statutes, as stipulated in Article 67 of the Constitution. This interpretive authority enables the NPCSC to issue binding explanations on ambiguous provisions or their application, ensuring uniform enforcement across state organs; such interpretations are promulgated directly by the NPCSC and possess the force of law without requiring presidential approval. For instance, the NPCSC has exercised this power in cases involving statutory ambiguities, such as clarifications on property rights or administrative procedures, typically in response to requests from courts, administrative bodies, or during legislative reviews.[48][49] In addition to constitutional interpretation, the NPCSC supervises the enforcement of the Constitution by overseeing the activities of key state institutions, including the State Council (the central executive body), the Central Military Commission, the Supreme People's Court, and the Supreme People's Procuratorate. This supervision manifests through mechanisms such as reviewing annual work reports from these organs, conducting on-site inspections, and holding hearings on specific policy implementations or legal compliance issues. The NPCSC may revoke or annul decisions, orders, or regulations issued by the State Council or its ministries that contravene the Constitution or laws, thereby acting as a check on executive and judicial actions between NPC sessions.[50] These functions underscore the NPCSC's role in maintaining legal consistency and accountability within China's socialist legal system, though their exercise is coordinated with the leadership of the Communist Party of China, as reflected in procedural rules emphasizing party guidance in deliberations. Empirical data from NPCSC sessions indicate frequent use of these powers; for example, in 2023, the committee reviewed over 20 reports from supervised organs and issued interpretations on select legislative matters amid ongoing economic reforms. Limitations arise in practice, as the NPCSC lacks independent enforcement capabilities and relies on supervised bodies for implementation, potentially constraining causal impact on policy deviations.[51][47]Appointment and Major Decision Powers
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) exercises constitutional authority to appoint and remove senior officials across executive, judicial, and military branches, primarily when the full National People's Congress (NPC) is not in session. Under Article 67(7) of the Constitution of the People's Republic of China (amended 2018), the NPCSC decides on the appointment or removal of Vice Premiers, State Councilors, ministers in charge of ministries or commissions, and the Auditor General of the National Audit Office, as well as approving the appointment or recall of ambassadors and equivalent diplomatic personnel.[52] [29] For the Premier, while the NPC elects the Premier upon nomination by the President (per Article 62), the NPCSC holds interim decision-making power over the Premier's position, including potential dismissal before the next NPC session.[52] In judicial matters, Article 67(8) empowers the NPCSC to appoint or remove the President of the Supreme People's Court and the Procurator-General of the Supreme People's Procuratorate between NPC sessions, subject to later NPC confirmation; it also decides on appointments to the Central Military Commission (excluding the Chairman, elected by the NPC).[52] [29] These appointment powers, though formally vested in the NPCSC, operate within a framework where key personnel selections originate from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Central Committee, with the NPCSC providing legislative ratification rather than independent deliberation.[10] For instance, premier appointments and State Council reshuffles are pre-determined through CCP processes months in advance, with NPCSC sessions serving to endorse outcomes, as evidenced by consistent alignment in high-level transitions since the 1982 Constitution.[10] This dynamic reflects the CCP's overarching control over state institutions, where the NPCSC functions as a conduit for party directives rather than an autonomous body, a pattern confirmed in analyses of NPC sessions from 2013 to 2023.[4] In major decision-making, the NPCSC holds authority over critical state issues reserved for NPC plenary but exercisable by the committee in emergencies or intersessional periods. Article 67(9) grants it power to ratify or abrogate treaties and important foreign agreements, while Article 67(10) authorizes declarations of war in states of emergency and issuance of mobilization orders.[52] [29] Additionally, under Article 67(11), it decides on general or partial mobilization and other NPC-level personnel or structural matters.[52] These powers have been invoked sparingly; for example, the NPCSC ratified the 2020 Phase One trade agreement with the United States on January 15, 2020, following executive negotiation. In practice, such decisions align with CCP Politburo strategies, with the NPCSC's role limited to formal approval, as seen in its 2022 endorsement of military mobilization frameworks amid Taiwan tensions, underscoring its function as an extension of party governance rather than a check on executive power.[10]Operational Framework
Sessions and Meeting Procedures
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) convenes regular sessions approximately every two months, with additional or emergency sessions called as necessary to address legislative, supervisory, or other mandates.[53] These sessions are scheduled by the Council of Chairpersons, and the chairperson or a vice-chairperson presides over them.[53] A quorum requires more than half of all committee members to be present, ensuring decisions reflect broad participation among the roughly 170 members.[53] The agenda for each session is drafted by the Council of Chairpersons and submitted for approval at the opening plenary meeting, with provisions for adjustments during deliberations if proposed and agreed upon. Deliberations occur through a combination of plenary meetings, group meetings, and joint group meetings, where bills and proposals are reviewed in detail, often incorporating reports from special committees. For legislative items, group meetings focus on clause-by-clause examination, followed by plenary consolidation of views. Decisions on bills, proposals, and other matters are adopted by a simple majority vote of all Standing Committee members, not merely those present, emphasizing the threshold's stringency. Voting typically proceeds by secret ballot using electronic devices, reverting to a show of hands if technical issues arise; amendments are voted on prior to the full text. Sessions conclude with announcements of adopted items, which may include laws, interpretations, or appointments, subject to promulgation by the state president where applicable.Decision-Making Processes
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) conducts its decision-making in accordance with the Rules of Procedure adopted on June 24, 2022, emphasizing the principle of democratic centralism, under which bills and issues are deliberated collectively before decisions are implemented uniformly.[53] This involves plenary sessions, group deliberations, and review by specialized committees such as the Constitution and Law Committee, which prepare reports on proposed legislation or decisions.[53] The Council of Chairpersons, led by the chairman, drafts the meeting agenda, which must be approved by the plenary session and can include bills submitted by state organs, the council itself, or at least 10 committee members.[53] Meetings occur at least every two months, with additional sessions convened as needed, requiring attendance by more than half of the committee's members for quorum.[53] During sessions, items are discussed in plenary or group formats, allowing members to propose amendments or opinions, which are then incorporated into committee reviews before final consideration.[53] Decisions on legislative bills, appointments, or other matters follow a structured sequence: amendments are voted on first, followed by the main item, with personnel appointments or removals handled individually or by slate as appropriate.[53] Voting occurs by secret ballot using electronic devices, with alternatives like hand-raising employed if devices fail; a simple majority of all committee members is required for passage.[53] Passed decisions are promulgated via orders from the committee or the president of the People's Republic of China.[53] In practice, voting outcomes on major bills and reports consistently achieve near-unanimous approval, reflecting prior consensus-building within the Chinese Communist Party's leadership structures that guide the committee's composition and priorities.[54] For instance, during the 14th NPC's sessions from 2023 to 2024, resolutions on work reports and laws passed with approval rates exceeding 99%, underscoring the centralized nature of final endorsements despite the formal deliberative mechanisms.[55]Recent Activities (2023-2025)
In 2023, the Standing Committee of the 14th National People's Congress (NPCSC), elected in March following the first session of the 14th NPC, convened multiple bimonthly sessions to advance legislative priorities. It released its 2023 legislative plan in May, identifying key projects for review, including drafts and amendments to laws on national security and economic regulation.[56] In September, during its sixth session, the NPCSC adopted the Five-Year Legislative Plan (2023-2027), categorizing over 100 projects into priority tiers for drafting, revision, or research, emphasizing areas such as civil code refinements and administrative procedures.[57] Throughout 2024, the NPCSC focused on enacting targeted legislation and personnel decisions. In April, at its ninth session, it adopted the Academic Degrees Law, standardizing criteria for higher education qualifications, and the Customs Duties Law, regulating tariff imposition and exemptions to align with trade policies.[58] The eleventh session in September approved a decision to implement a gradual increase in statutory retirement ages, starting from 2025, to address demographic pressures from an aging population.[59] In December, during its thirteenth session, it handled executive appointments, including the removal of Wang Guanghua as Minister of Natural Resources and the appointment of Guan Zhi'ou to the role, alongside ratifying international agreements.[60] The committee also conducted oversight inspections on law enforcement in sectors like work safety.[61] In 2025, up to its ongoing eighteenth session, the NPCSC continued legislative output and planning. In April, at the fifteenth session, it passed the Private Sector Promotion Law, effective May 20, aimed at supporting non-state enterprises through incentives and protections.[62] The seventeenth session in September adopted amendments to the Food Safety Law, enhancing regulatory standards and penalties, and a new law promoting education through resource allocation and quality improvements.[63] Earlier in May, it issued its annual oversight plan, prioritizing inspections on fiscal policies and environmental laws.[64] The eighteenth session, held October 24-28, reviewed a draft revision to the Maritime Law and submitted amendments to the Foreign Trade Law for consideration, reflecting ongoing adaptations to international economic dynamics.[65] Across the period, the NPCSC executed approximately 20 appointments and removals of senior officials, including judicial and ministerial roles, in line with state administrative needs.[21]Notable Actions and Impacts
Key Legislative Outputs
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) primarily enacts non-basic laws, including those on administrative management, economic regulation, national security, and social affairs, while the full NPC handles foundational statutes like the Criminal Law or Constitution. Between NPC sessions, the NPCSC has passed hundreds of laws and amendments since its establishment, with a marked increase in output focusing on cybersecurity, foreign relations, and technological self-reliance amid geopolitical tensions. From 2021 to September 2025, the NPC and NPCSC together formulated 36 new laws, revised 63 existing ones, and issued 35 decisions on legal matters.[43] Notable national security-related outputs include the Law of the People's Republic of China on Safeguarding National Security in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, adopted on June 30, 2020, which criminalizes secession, subversion, terrorism, and collusion with foreign forces in the territory.[66] In 2021, responding to international sanctions, the NPCSC enacted the Anti-Foreign Sanctions Law on June 10, empowering countermeasures against entities imposing discriminatory restrictions on Chinese citizens or organizations.[67] On the same date, it passed the Data Security Law, establishing graded protections for data deemed critical to national security and prohibiting its export without approval, effective September 1, 2021.[68] The Anti-Organized Crime Law, adopted December 24, 2021, introduced measures against triad-like groups and "soft violence" tactics, marking China's first dedicated statute on organized crime.[42] Economic and technological legislation has emphasized state oversight and innovation. The NPCSC adopted the Foreign State Immunity Law on September 1, 2023, limiting sovereign immunity for foreign states in Chinese courts under reciprocal principles.[42] More recently, on September 13, 2025, it passed the Atomic Energy Law to regulate nuclear development and safety, the Public Health Emergency Response Law to enhance crisis management, and the National Parks Law to consolidate ecological protection.[44] These outputs reflect priorities in self-sufficiency, with laws like the Promotion Law of the Private Economy aimed at bolstering non-state sectors while aligning them with national strategies.[43]Interventions in Special Administrative Regions
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) holds interpretive authority over the Basic Laws of Hong Kong and Macau under Articles 158 and 159, respectively, enabling it to clarify provisions upon request from SAR courts or proactively when national sovereignty or security is implicated.[69] This power has facilitated direct interventions, particularly in Hong Kong, to align local governance with central priorities, including amendments to electoral annexes and promulgation of national laws via Annex III.[48] Such actions stem from the constitutional framework vesting ultimate legal authority in Beijing, though they have prompted debates over the erosion of promised high autonomy.[70] In Hong Kong, the NPCSC issued its first major interpretation on December 20, 1999, regarding Articles 22(4) and 24(2)(3) of the Basic Law, restricting permanent residency rights to those born in the territory or with at least one parent holding right of abode, overturning a local court ruling and prompting accusations of retroactive interference.[48] Subsequent interpretations included April 27, 2004, on Article 45, stipulating that a new Chief Executive serves only the remainder of the predecessor's term rather than a full five years, applied to Donald Tsang's succession after Tung Chee-hwa's resignation.[71] On August 31, 2014, the NPCSC decided on universal suffrage under Articles 45 and 68, mandating that candidates for Chief Executive be nominated by a committee ensuring "broad geographic representation" effectively loyal to Beijing, which fueled the 79-day Umbrella Movement protests.[72] Further escalations occurred amid 2019 unrest: on June 30, 2020, the NPCSC promulgated the Law of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region on Safeguarding National Security, bypassing local legislature and applying mainland-style offenses like secession and subversion, with Beijing appointing judges for national security cases.[70] In response to perceived threats to stability, the NPCSC amended Annex I (Chief Executive method) and Annex II (Legislative Council method) on March 30, 2021, following an NPC decision on March 11, introducing a Candidate Eligibility Review Committee, expanding the Election Committee to 1,500 members with stricter vetting for "patriots," and reducing directly elected LegCo seats from 50% to about 22%, aiming to prevent "anti-China" influences.[73] A December 30, 2022, interpretation clarified Article 23 obligations, endorsing local legislation on additional security offenses completed in March 2024.[74] Interventions in Macau have been comparatively restrained, reflecting greater alignment with central policies and fewer disputes. The NPCSC has primarily acted to extend national laws via Annex III, such as adding the National Anthem Law in 2020 and the Safeguarding National Security Law framework, with Macau enacting its version locally in June 2023 without interpretive overrides.[75] No major Basic Law interpretations akin to Hong Kong's have occurred, underscoring Macau's compliance in electoral and security matters, including 2017 Chief Executive election reforms vetted by Beijing without amendment.[48] This disparity highlights causal factors like Macau's economic reliance on mainland integration versus Hong Kong's history of civil society activism.Broader Governance Influence
The NPC Standing Committee (NPCSC) extends its influence across Chinese governance by supervising the implementation of laws and policies by central state organs, including the State Council, Supreme People's Court, and Supreme People's Procuratorate, through mechanisms such as enforcement inspections and special inquiries. These activities ensure compliance with centrally directed objectives, with the NPCSC conducting targeted reviews to address gaps in execution; for example, in its 2023 work report, it emphasized oversight amid historic changes, coordinating with the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee to advance Party leadership in governance.[15] Such supervision has tangible effects, as seen in annual reports mandating corrective actions by supervised entities, thereby reinforcing centralized control over administrative and judicial functions.[4] In economic and developmental policy, the NPCSC shapes national trajectories by deliberating and approving key frameworks like five-year plans, with its 2025 work report highlighting initiatives to enhance consumption, border area stability, and security under new-era conditions.[21][76] It also ratifies international treaties and approves state budgets, influencing resource allocation; between 2020 and 2025, this included endorsements of plans integrating economic security with overall national security, aligning fiscal priorities with CPC strategic goals.[4] These decisions, often prepared in tandem with CPC directives, facilitate policy continuity, as evidenced by the NPCSC's role in revising procedural rules to streamline decision-making during its 2022 sessions.[77] On national security and foreign relations, the NPCSC promulgates enabling legislation and resolutions that operationalize broader state responses, such as laws on hazardous chemicals safety and anti-foreign sanctions, extending its reach into defensive and diplomatic domains.[78] From 2020 onward, it has authorized mechanisms for safeguarding security in special contexts, including border regions, while conducting research to bolster development-security linkages, as detailed in its 2025 report.[21] This influence operates within the CPC-led system, where NPCSC actions legitimize and institutionalize Politburo-level policies, contributing to governance cohesion without independent deviation, per structural analyses of its composition dominated by senior Party figures.[79]Leadership Structure
Historical Chairpersons
The chairpersons of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) have been senior Communist Party of China (CPC) leaders who oversee the committee's legislative and supervisory functions between full NPC sessions, a role established with the inaugural NPC in September 1954. The position has typically been held by Politburo Standing Committee members, reflecting the fusion of party and state authority in China's governance structure. [1] [80]| Sequence | Chairperson | Term | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Liu Shaoqi | 15 September 1954 – 27 April 1959 | First chairman; also served as PRC President until 1968 purge. [1] |
| 2 | Zhu De | 27 April 1959 – 6 July 1976 | Nominal head during Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), when NPCSC activities were largely suspended amid political upheaval; died in office. [1] [81] |
| 3 | Ye Jianying | 10 January 1978 – 18 June 1983 | Oversaw post-Mao reconstitution of NPC institutions following Deng Xiaoping's reforms. [1] |
| 4 | Peng Zhen | 18 June 1983 – April 1988 | Focused on legal codification efforts in early reform era. [1] |
| 5 | Wan Li | April 1988 – March 1993 | Emphasized rural reforms and administrative decentralization. [1] |
| 6 | Qiao Shi | March 1993 – March 1998 | Advanced state supervision laws amid economic liberalization. [1] |
| 7 | Li Peng | March 1998 – March 2003 | Former Premier; prioritized infrastructure and state-owned enterprise reforms. [1] |
| 8 | Wu Bangguo | March 2003 – March 2013 | Longest-serving post-reform chairman; stressed "harmonious society" policies under Hu Jintao. [1] [82] |
| 9 | Zhang Dejiang | March 2013 – March 2018 | Implemented anti-corruption oversight and ethnic policy enforcement under Xi Jinping's early tenure. [1] [82] |
| 10 | Li Zhanshu | March 2018 – March 2023 | Coordinated constitutional amendments, including Xi's indefinite term provision in 2018. [80] |
Current 14th NPCSC Leadership
The Standing Committee of the 14th National People's Congress (NPCSC) was elected by the first session of the 14th National People's Congress on March 10, 2023, comprising 159 members including one chairman, 14 vice chairpersons, one secretary-general, and 143 regular members.[1][83] The committee's leadership positions are held by senior figures from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and other political parties in the united front system, reflecting the NPCSC's role as a key institution under CCP guidance.[84] Zhao Leji, a member of the 20th CCP Central Committee Standing Committee, was elected chairman on March 10, 2023, succeeding Li Zhanshu.[1][63] In this role, he presides over committee sessions and directs its overall work, as evidenced by his chairing of meetings through at least April 2025.[85] The 14 vice chairpersons, also elected on March 10, 2023, assist the chairman and include:- Li Hongzhong, member of the 20th CCP Central Committee[84]
- Wang Dongming, member of the 20th CCP Central Committee and chairman of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions[84]
- Xiao Jie, member of the 20th CCP Central Committee[84]
- Zheng Jianbang, chairman of the Central Committee of the Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang (RCCK)[84]
- Ding Zhongli, chairman of the Central Committee of the China Democratic League (CDL)[84]
- Hao Mingjin, chairman of the Central Committee of the China National Democratic Construction Association (CNDCA)[84]
- Cai Dafeng, chairman of the Central Committee of the China Association for Promoting Democracy (CAPD)[84]
- He Wei, chairman of the Central Committee of the China Peasants and Workers Democratic Party (CPWDP)[84]
- Wu Weihua, chairman of the Central Committee of the Jiusan Society[84]
- Tie Ning, member of the 20th CCP Central Committee and chairperson of the China Federation of Literary and Art Circles[84]
- Peng Qinghua[84]
- Zhang Qingwei, member of the 20th CCP Central Committee and secretary of the CPC Hunan Provincial Committee[84]
- Losang Jamcan, deputy secretary of the CPC Tibet Autonomous Regional Committee[84]
- Shohrat Zakir[84]