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Xi Zhongxun

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chinese politician (1913–2002), father of Xi Jinping
In this Chinese name, the family name is ().
Xi Zhongxun
习仲勋
Xi in the 1990s
Vice Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress
In office
10 September 1980 – 15 March 1993
Chairman Ye JianyingPeng ZhenWan Li
Communist Party Secretary of Guangdong
In office
November 1978 – November 1980
Preceded byWei Guoqing
Succeeded byRen Zhongyi
Governor of Guangdong
In office
January 1979 – February 1981
Preceded byWei Guoqing
(as Director of the Guangdong Provincial Revolutionary Committee)
Succeeded byLiu Tianfu
1st Secretary-General of the State Council
In office
September 1954 – January 1965
PremierZhou Enlai
Preceded byLi Weihan
Succeeded byZhou Rongxin
14th Head of the Publicity Department of the Chinese Communist Party
In office
January 1953 – July 1954
Party Chairman Mao Zedong
Preceded byLu Dingyi
Succeeded byLu Dingyi
Personal details
Born(1913年10月15日)15 October 1913
Fuping County, Shaanxi, Republic of China
Died24 May 2002(2002年05月24日) (aged 88)
Beijing, People's Republic of China
Political partyChinese Communist Party (joined in 1928)
Spouse(s)Hao Mingzhu
Qi Xin
Children7, including Qi Qiaoqiao, Xi Jinping and Xi Yuanping
Military service
Branch/serviceChinese Red Army
UnitGuominjun
CommandsChinese Red Army
First Field Army
Battles/wars
Xi Zhongxun
Simplified Chinese 习仲勋
Traditional Chinese 習仲勲
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin Xí Zhòngxūn
Wade–Giles Hsi Chung-hsün
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutping Zaap6 Zung6-fan1

Xi Zhongxun (Chinese: 习仲勋; pinyin: Xí Zhòngxūn; 15 October 1913 – 24 May 2002) was a Chinese communist revolutionary and politician who was the 1st Secretary General of the State Council from 1954 to 1965; Communist Party Secretary of Guangdong from 1978 to 1980; and vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress from 1980 to 1993. His second son, Xi Jinping, is the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party since 2012.

He is considered to be among the first and second generation of Chinese leadership.[1] The contributions he made to the Chinese communist revolution and the development of the People's Republic, from the founding of Communist guerrilla bases in northwestern China in the 1930s to initiation of economic liberalization in southern China in the 1980s, are numerous and broad. He was known for political moderation and for the setbacks he endured in his career. He was imprisoned and purged several times.

Early life and education

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Xi was born on 15 October 1913, to a land-owning family, in rural Fuping County, Shaanxi.[2] His parents, Xi Zongde and Chai Caihua, died when he was a teenager.[3] He joined the Chinese Communist Youth League in May 1926 and took part in student demonstrations in the spring of 1928, for which he was imprisoned by the ruling nationalist authorities.[2] In prison, he joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1928.[2]

Career

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Red Army

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In 1930, Xi was appointed by the party to work in the Guominjun under Yang Hucheng.[4] In March 1932, he led an unsuccessful uprising within that army in Liangdang, Gansu.[2] [5] Subsequently, he joined Communist guerrillas north of the Wei River.[2] In March 1933, he joined Liu Zhidan and others in founding the Shaanxi–Gansu (Shaangan) Border Region Soviet Area, and became the chairman of the Soviet area government while leading guerillas in resisting Nationalist incursions and expanding the Soviet area.[2] In early 1935, the Shaanxi–Gansu Border and Northern Shaanxi Soviet Areas merged to form the Revolutionary Base Area of the Northwest and Xi became one of the leaders of the base area.[2] But in September 1935, he along with Liu Zhidan and Gao Gang were jailed during a Leftist rectification campaign within the party.[2] By his own account, he was within four days of being executed when CCP Chairman Mao Zedong arrived on the scene and ordered Xi and his comrades released.[6] Xi's guerrilla base in the Northwest gave refuge to Mao Zedong and the party center, and allowed them to end the Long March. It is said that Xi's "Revolutionary Base Area of the Northwest saved the Party Center and the Party Center saved the revolutionaries of the Northwest."[6] The base area eventually became the Yan'an Soviet, the headquarters of the Chinese Communist movement until 1947.

Sino-Japanese War

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During the Second Sino-Japanese War, Xi stayed in the Yan'an Soviet to manage civilian and military affairs, boost economic production within the Soviet, and implement party policies.[2] He was known for evaluating policies based on empirical assessment and resisting "leftist" extremism in implementing party directives.[2] At the 7th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in August 1945, he was named an alternate member of the Central Committee and became the deputy director of the party's organization department, in charge of making personnel decision.[2] As World War II in China was winding down, he defeated a Nationalist attack on the Yan'an Soviet at Futaishan and assisted the breakout of Wang Zhen's 359 Brigade from the North China Plains.[2]

Chinese Civil War and post-war transition

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Xi in 1949

With the outbreak of full-scale civil war between Communists and Nationalists in early 1947, Xi remained in northwestern China to coordinate the protection and then recapture of the Yan'an Soviet Area.[2] As political commissar, Xi and commander Zhang Zongxun defeated Nationalists west of Yan'an at the Battle of Xihuachi in March 1947.[2] After Yan'an fell to Hu Zongnan on 19 March 1947, Xi worked on the staff of Peng Dehuai in the battles to retake Yan'an and capture northwest China.[2]

Xi directed the political work of the Northwest Political and Military Affairs Bureau, which was tasked with bringing Communist governance to the newly captured areas of the Northwest.[2] In this capacity, Xi was known for his moderate policies and the use of non-military means to pacify rebellious areas.[2]

Xi was sometimes critical of the land reform movement,[7] and was an advocate for the position of the middle peasantry.[8] As violence increased in 1948, Xi reported that activists in the northwest had sometimes falsely designated landlords and manufactured struggle.[7] In 1952, Xi Zhongxun halted the campaign of Wang Zhen and Deng Liqun to implement land reform and class struggle to pastoralist regions of Xinjiang.[9] Xi, based on experience in Inner Mongolia, advised against assigning class labels and waging class struggle among pastoralists, but was ignored by Wang and Deng who directed the seizure of livestock from landowners and land from religious authorities.[9] The policies inflamed social unrest in pastoralist northern Xinjiang where Ospan Batyr uprising had just been quelled.[9] With the support of Mao, Xi reversed the policies, had Wang Zhen relieved from Xinjiang and released over a thousand herders from prison.[9]

Xi Zhongxun (middle) with Xinjiang leaders Burhan Shahidi (right) and Saifuddin Azizi (left) in 1952.

In July 1951, following the Communists' defeat of the Ma Clique armies in Qinghai, remnants of the Muslim warlords incited rebellion among Tibetan tribesmen.[10] Among those who took up arms was chieftain Xiang Qian of the Nganglha Tribe in eastern Qinghai.[10] As the PLA sent troops to quell the uprising, Xi Zhongxun urged for a political solution.[10] Numerous envoys including Geshe Sherab Gyatso and the Panchen Lama went to negotiate.[10] Though Xiang Qian rebuffed dozens of offers and the PLA managed to capture the chieftain's villages, Xi continued to pursue a political solution.[10] He released captured tribesmen, offered generous terms to Xiang Qian and forgave those who took part in the uprising.[10] In July 1952, Xiang Qian returned from hiding in the mountains, pledged his allegiance to the People's Republic and was invited by Xi to attend the graduation ceremony of the Nationalities College in Lanzhou.[10] In 1953, Xiang Qiang became the chief of Jainca County. Mao compared Xi's deft treatment of Xiang Qian to Zhuge Liang's conciliation of Meng Huo in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms .[citation needed ]

When the 14th Dalai Lama visited Beijing in 1954 for several months of political meetings and studies in Chinese and Marxism, Xi spent time with the Tibetan leader, who fondly recalled Xi as "very friendly, comparatively open-minded, very nice."[11] As a gift, the Dalai Lama gave Xi an Omega watch.[12] When the Dalai Lama's brother visited Beijing in the early 1980s, Xi was still wearing that watch.[12]

High offices in Beijing, purge

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Xi Zhongxun was brought to a struggle session at Northwest A&F University in September 1967, during the Cultural Revolution.

In September 1952, Xi Zhongxun became chief of the party's propaganda department and supervised cultural and education policies.[13] At the 8th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in 1956, he was elected a member of the CCP Central Committee.[13] In 1959, he became a vice-premier and worked under Premier Zhou Enlai in directing the State Council's lawmaking and policy research functions.[13]

In 1962, he was accused by Kang Sheng of leading an anti-party clique for supporting the Biography of Liu Zhidan , and purged from all leadership positions.[13] The biography, written by Li Jiantong (李建彤) to commemorate Xi's former comrade who died a party martyr in 1936, was alleged to be a covert effort to subvert the party by rehabilitating Gao Gang, another former comrade who had been purged in 1954. Xi Zhongxun was forced to undergo self-criticism and in 1965 was demoted to the position of a deputy manager of a tractor factory in Luoyang.[14] During the Cultural Revolution, he was persecuted, jailed and spent long periods in confinement in Beijing.[14] He regained his freedom in May 1975 and was assigned to another factory in Luoyang.[14]

As Guangdong's top official

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After the Cultural Revolution ended, Xi was fully rehabilitated at the Third Plenary Session of the 11th CCP Central Committee in December 1978.[13] From 1978 to 1981, he held leadership roles in Guangdong Province, successively as the second and then first provincial secretary, governor and political commissar of the Guangdong Military Region.[13] In Guangdong, he stabilized the provincial government and began to liberalize the economy.[13]

To curb further immigration to Hong Kong, in 1979, Xi Zhongxun arranged for the creation of special economic zones in Guangdong Province including Shenzhen, pictured here, which has grown to become one of the largest cities in China.

When he first arrived in Guangdong, he was told the provincial government had long been struggling to hold back the exodus of Chinese to Hong Kong since 1951.[15] [16] At the time, daily wages in Guangdong averaged 0.70 yuan, about 1/100 of wages in Hong Kong.[16] Xi understood the disparity in standards of living and called for economic liberalisation in Guangdong.[16]

Along with Yang Shangkun, who at the time was also a key Guangdong official, Xi told Deng Xiaoping that Guangdong should become a national demonstration zone for Reform and Opening Up.[17] : xvii  In meetings in April 1979, Xi convinced Deng to permit Guangdong to make its own foreign trade policy decisions and to invite foreign investment to projects in experimental areas along the provincial border with Hong Kong and Macau and in Shantou, which has a large overseas diaspora.[18] As for the name of the experimental areas, Deng said, "let's call them, 'special zones', [after all, your] Shaanxi-Gansu Border Region began as a 'special zone'."[18] Deng added, "The Central Government has no funds, but we can give you some favorable policies." Borrowing a phrase from their guerrilla war days, Deng told Xi, "You have to find a way, to fight a bloody path out."[18] Xi submitted a formal proposal on the creation of special zones, later renamed special economic zones and in July 1979, the party center and State Council approved the creation of the first four special economic zones.[16] [18]

Retirement

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In 1981, Xi returned to Beijing and was elected the deputy chair of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress and also held the chair of the legal affairs committee.[13] In this capacity, he oversaw the drafting of numerous laws.[13] In September 1982, he was elected to the CCP Politburo and the CCP secretariat.[13] In 1987, Deng Xiaoping and powerful elder Chen Yun were dissatisfied with the liberal inclination of Hu Yaobang, and called a meeting to force Hu to resign as CCP General Secretary. Xi was the only one that defended Hu. Xi retired from public service in March 1993 and spent most of his retirement years in Shenzhen.[13] [16]

Xi Zhongxun attended the 50th anniversary of the People's Republic of China in Beijing in October 1999.

Personal life and death

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In 1936, Xi married Hao Mingzhu, the niece of revolutionary fighter Wu Daifeng, in Shaanxi. The union lasted until 1944, and the couple had three children: one son, Xi Fuping (aka Xi Zhengning), and two daughters, Xi Heping, and Xi Ganping.[19] According to official records, Xi Heping died during the Cultural Revolution due to persecution, which historians have concluded means that she most likely committed suicide under duress.[20] Little is known about Xi Ganping, except that she was retired by 2013 and regularly appears at meetings of Princelings. Xi Zhengning, meanwhile, was a researcher in the Ministry of Defence but later pursued a bureaucratic career; he died in 1998.[21]

In 1944, Xi Zhongxun married Qi Xin, his second wife, and had four children: Qi Qiaoqiao, Xi An'an, Xi Jinping and Xi Yuanping. Xi Jinping became the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and Chairman of the Central Military Commission, thus the paramount leader of China, from 15 November 2012, and has been President of the People's Republic of China since March 2013.

Xi Zhongxun died 24 May 2002. His funeral and subsequent cremation at Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery on 30 May was attended by party and state leaders, including President Jiang Zemin, Premier Zhu Rongji, and Vice President Hu Jintao. His ashes were subsequently buried at a cemetery named in honor of him at Fuping County.[13] [22]

His official obituary described him as "an outstanding proletarian revolutionary," "a great communist soldier," and "one of the main founders and leaders of the revolutionary base areas in the Shaanxi-Gansu border region."

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Đình Nguyễn. "Tập Cận Bình – 'Lãnh đạo tương lai' của Trung Quốc" (in Vietnamese). Vnexpress. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q 习仲勋的故事(全本)前中央书记处书记习仲勋的战斗一生 - 第1章 习仲勋生平(1) (in Chinese (China)). Ifeng Books. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  3. ^ Sheridan, Michael (2024). The Red Emperor: Xi Jinping and His New China. London, U.K.: Headline Press. p. 20. ISBN 9781035413485. His father, Zi Zongde, died in his early forties, when the boy was a teenager. His mother, Chai Caihua, lived only a year longer.
  4. ^ "《习仲勋的故事》_共产党员网". fuwu.12371.cn. Retrieved 4 November 2021.
  5. ^ 晨雨 (Chenyu), 杨 (Yang) (11 June 2009). "两当兵变的特点和历史地位-两当|兵变|特点|历史地位-每日甘肃-陇南日报 (The characteristics and the historical status of the Liangdang Uprising)". Archived from the original on 11 May 2019.
  6. ^ a b He, Libo (何立波); Ma, Hongmin (马红敏). "英雄一世,坎坷一生"的习仲勋" 中国共产党新闻>>党史频道>>人物长廊. people.cn (in Chinese (China)). Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  7. ^ a b DeMare, Brian James (2019). Land wars : the story of China's agrarian revolution. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-5036-0849-8. OCLC 1048940018.
  8. ^ DeMare, Brian James (2019). Land wars : the story of China's agrarian revolution. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-5036-0849-8. OCLC 1048940018.
  9. ^ a b c d "王震新疆镇反被撤职幕后". 21cn.com (in Chinese (China)). 7 July 2009. Archived from the original on 17 August 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2012. 7 July 2009
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Zhang, Shaowu (张绍武); Guo, Suqiang (郭素强) (9 September 2011). "昂拉平叛与争取项谦的经过". hhwhjj.com (Yellow River Culture and Economy online) (in Chinese (China)). Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2012. 9 September 2011
  11. ^ Benjamin K. Lim & Frank J. Daniel, "Does China's next leader have a soft spot for Tibet?" Reuters 1 September 2012
  12. ^ a b Pramit Pal Chaudhuri, "Tibet's conquest of China's Xi Jinping family" Hindustan Times Archived 13 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine 4 February 2013
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l 习仲勋的故事(全本)前中央书记处书记习仲勋的战斗一生 - 第1章 习仲勋生平(2) (in Chinese (China)). Ifeng Books. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  14. ^ a b c 习仲勋蒙受不白之冤]. crt.com.cn (Zhonghongwang) (in Chinese (China)). Archived from the original on 19 May 2012. Retrieved 19 February 2012. Accessed 19 February 2012
  15. ^ Chen Bing'an [陳秉安] (2016). 大逃港(增訂本) [The Great Exodus to Hong Kong (Revised edition)] (in Chinese). Hong Kong Open Page. p. 371-389.
  16. ^ a b c d e 习仲勋:我要看着深圳发展 (in Chinese (China)). Sina News. 25 August 2010.
  17. ^ Chatwin, Jonathan (2024). The Southern Tour: Deng Xiaoping and the Fight for China's Future. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781350435711.
  18. ^ a b c d 谷梁 "习仲勋主政广东的历史功绩:改革开放天下先 (6)". people.cn (Renminwang) (in Chinese (China)). 21 January 2012.
  19. ^ Andrésy 2016, p. 8.
  20. ^ Buckley, Chris; Tatlow, Didi Kirsten (24 September 2015). "Cultural Revolution Shaped Xi Jinping, From Schoolboy to Survivor". New York Times . Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  21. ^ Andrésy 2016, p. 9.
  22. ^ "Dozens Detained in Bid To Visit Grave of Chinese President's Father". Radio Free Asia. 5 April 2017. Retrieved 5 September 2022.

Sources

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  • Andrésy, Agnès (2016). Xi Jinping: Red China, the Next Generation. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. ISBN 9780761866015.
  • China's New Rulers: The Secret File, Andrew J. Nathan and Bruce Gilley, The New York Review Book
  • The Origins of the Cultural Revolution, Vol. 3 : The Coming of the Cataclysm, 1961-1966 (Columbia University Press, 1997)
[edit ]
Offices and distinctions of Xi Zhongxun
Party political offices
Preceded by Secretary of the CCP Guangdong Provincial Committee
1978–1980
Succeeded by
Preceded by Head of the Propaganda Department of the CCP Central Committee
1953–1954
Succeeded by
Government offices
Preceded by Governor of Guangdong
1979–1981
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary General of the State Council
1953–1965
Succeeded by
Zhou Enlai Cabinet (1954–1959)
Premier
12 Vice Premiers
Secretary-General
Ministers
   

1 Internal Affairs Xie Juezai
2 Ministry of Foreign Affairs Zhou Enlai PSC
3 Ministry of National Defense Peng Dehuai P
4 Ministry of Public Security Luo Ruiqing
5 Ministry of Justice Shi Liang
6 Ministry of Supervision Qian Ying
7 State Planning Commission Li Fuchun P
8 State Infrastructure Commission Bo YiboWang Heshou
9 Ministry of Finance Li Xiannian P
10 Ministry of Food Zhang Naiqi
11 Ministry of Commerce Zeng Shan
12 Ministry of Foreign Trade Ye Jizhuang
13 Ministry of Heavy Industry/ Ministry of Metallurgical Industry Wang Heshou
14 Ministry of Chemical Industry Peng Tao
15 Ministry of Building Materials Industry Lai Jifa

16 First Ministry of Machine Building Huang Jing
17 Second Ministry of Machine Building Zhao Erlu
18 Ministry Of Fuel Industries Chen Yu
19 Ministry of Geology Li Siguang
20 Ministry of Building Construction Liu Xiufeng
21 Ministry of Textile Industry Jiang Guangnai
22 Ministry of Light Industry Jia TuofuSha Qianli
23 Ministry of Local Industry Sha Qianli
24 Ministry of Railways Teng Daiyuan
25 Ministry of Transport Zhang Bojun
26 Ministry of Posts & Telecommunications Zhu Xuefan
27 Ministry of Agriculture Liao Luyan
28 Ministry of Forestry Liang Xi
29 Ministry of Water Resources Fu Zuoyi
30 Ministry of Labor Ma Wenrui

31 Ministry of Culture Shen Yanbing
32 Ministry of Higher Education Yang Xiufeng
33 Ministry of Education Zhang Xiruo
34 Ministry of Health Li Dequan
35 Commission for Physical Culture and Sports He Long P
36 Ethnic Affairs Commission Ulanhu
37 Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission He Xiangning
38 Third Ministry of Machine Building Zhang Linzhi
39 National Economic Commission Bo Yibo
40 National Technical Commission Huang Jing
41 Ministry of Urban Development Wan Li
42 Ministry of Food Industry Li Zhuchen
43 Ministry of Aquatic Products Xu Deheng
44 Ministry of State Farms and Land Reclamation Wang Zhen
45 Ministry of Timber Industry Luo Longji

Standing Committee
  1. Hu Yaobang (General Secretary until Jan 1987)
  2. Ye Jianying (retired Sep 1985)
  3. Deng Xiaoping
  4. Zhao Ziyang (Acting General Secretary after Jan 1987)
  5. Li Xiannian
  6. Chen Yun
Other members
in surname stroke order
Before 5th Plenum
(Sep 1985)
After 5th Plenum
Alternate members
  1. Yao Yilin (full member Sep 1985)
  2. Qin Jiwei
  3. Chen Muhua
7th8th9th10th11th12th13th14th15th16th17th18th19th20th
Provisional Cabinet
1st Cabinet
2nd Cabinet
3rd Cabinet
  1. Lin Biao (died 1971)
  2. Chen Yun (dismissed 1969)
  3. Deng Xiaoping (dismissed 1968, reinstated 1973)
  4. He Long (died 1969)
  5. Chen Yi (died 1972)
  6. Ke Qingshi (died 1965)
  7. Ulanhu (dismissed 1968)
  8. Li Fuchun (died 1975)
  9. Li Xiannian
  10. Tan Zhenlin
  11. Nie Rongzhen
  12. Bo Yibo (dismissed 1967)
  13. Lu Dingyi (dismissed 1966)
  14. Luo Ruiqing (dismissed 1966)
  15. Tao Zhu (died 1969)
  16. Xie Fuzhi (died 1972)
4th Cabinet
  1. Deng Xiaoping (dismissed 1976, reinstated 1977)
  2. Zhang Chunqiao (dismissed 1977)
  3. Li Xiannian
  4. Chen Xilian
  5. Ji Dengkui
  6. Hua Guofeng
  7. Chen Yonggui
  8. Wu Guixian ♀ (resigned 1977)
  9. Wang Zhen
  10. Yu Qiuli
  11. Gu Mu
  12. Sun Jian
5th Cabinet (1978)
5th Cabinet (1980)
5th Cabinet (1982)
6th Cabinet
7th Cabinet
8th Cabinet
9th Cabinet
10th Cabinet
11th Cabinet
12th Cabinet
13th Cabinet
14th Cabinet
1st
(1954–1959)
2nd
(1959–1964)
3rd
(1964–1975)
4th
(1975–1978)
5th
(1978–1983)
6th
(1983–1988)
7th
(1988–1993)
8th
(1993–1998)
9th
(1998–2003)
10th
(2003–2008)
11th
(2008–2013)
12th
(2013–2018)
13th
(2018–2023)
14th
(2023–2028)
Party committee
secretaries
Congress
chairpersons
Governors
Conference
chairpersons
Policies
and theories
Events
First term
Second term
Third term
Diplomacy
Policies
Meetings
and trips
Works
Family
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