Members of the Guangdong Provincial Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) will be sacked
if they fail to turn up twice for meetings without prior
permission.
That's according to a new regulation from the standing committee
of the provincial conference.
Yang Dong, secretary-general of the Guangdong provincial
committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference, said the rule aims to increase the sense of
responsibility among members while flushing out 'dormant' ones.
Ren Jiantao, a public administration professor of
Guangzhou-based Sun Yat-sen University, spoke highly of the new
regulation.
"Beyond doubt, there are members who only wish for the honour
and corresponding privileges as political consultative members
rather than wanting an opportunity to participate in the
administration and discussion of state affairs," the professor
said.
"The new regulation will play an effective role in securing
willing advisors and rejecting reluctant ones."
The regulation stipulates that even members of the standing
committee of the provincial political consultative conference will
be asked to quit if absent from four meetings of the standing
committee without advanced application for leave.
"Members are the body of the provincial committee," said Yang.
"Only when they are active can they play their advisory roles
well."
The local people's political consultative conference is an
advisory body to local authorities. Conference members are
encouraged to participate in the administration and discussion of
state affairs by proposing resolutions and suggestions.
Some of the members are full-time while many others are
part-time.
Yang said the provincial committee makes an announcement of a
meeting or a social activity at least one week in advance to leave
enough time for members, especially those working on a part-time
basis, to make arrangements.
He said that the provincial committee told 28 political
consultative members to quit including Sun Shuwei and Hu Jia both
diving champions in the last Olympic Games and a Hong Kong
businessman, in January this year after their failure to propose
suggestions or to attend most meetings in the past two years.
The new rule, drafted early in 2005, was passed by the standing
committee of the provincial conference in late September.
(China Daily October 10, 2006)