Original Source: People's Daily
The Party’s official mouthpiece, reporting directly to the Publicity/Propaganda department of the CCP Central Committee – the government’s most powerful decision-making body. It is the most printed publication in China and the designated platform for transmitting the Party’s official views, directions, and future policies.
These formal guidelines, issued in 2014 by the CCP General Office, outline the process organizations must follow when cultivating new applicants to the CCP, as well as the formal steps applicants must go through on their path to full Party membership.
On a semi-regular basis, the CCP Politburo holds a “study session,” led by an outside academic or government expert on a selected topic. Such sessions are important signals as to what issues the senior leadership find important. The June 18, 2022 session focused on anti-corruption measures within the Party and was led by an official at the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisory Commission.
Yuan Peng, the president of one of China’s leading international relations think tanks and an influential advisor to the CCP on foreign policy, outlines the importance of Xi Jinping’s vision of “national security” for navigating the “new great struggle” of global uncertainty.
This People’s Daily commentary by Politburo Standing Committee member Zhao Leji discusses the theme of “self-revolution” in the Party and its connection to China’s development.
This article, written by the Party Secretary of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, highlights the centrality of the Party’s concept of “national security” in its efforts to govern its border regions.
Analysis of China’s increasingly complicated international strategic environment by a senior official at the Central Party School, the Communist Party’s premier cadre training facility.
A researcher at the CCP Central Party School argues that the January 6th riot at the Capitol Building “exposed the myth of ‘American democracy.'”
A commentary detailing the theoretical underpinnings, risks, opportunities, and practical tasks for Xi’s vision of China’s path into a new stage of development, connecting them to the guiding principles from the 5th Plenum – which approved China’s economic plan and goals through 2035 as stated in the 14th Five-Year Plan.
An explanation of how the Common Prosperity concept is the essential next step on China’s Socialist path to national rejuvenation because, according to Xi Jinping, it is necessary to correct the unequal distribution of benefits from China’s development thus far.
A leading Marxist theorist at the Central Party School attempts to locate the new Common Prosperity concept within the larger arc of China’s path of development and modernization.