More than 2,200 party delegates began to scrutinize a list of nominees today
before making their choice on who would enter the central committee of China's
ruling Communist Party.
The list, endorsed by the 237-member presidium of
the 17th National Congress of the CPC yesterday, was prepared by a special
working group under the Political Bureau of the 16th CPC Central Committee,
spokesman of the congress Li Dongsheng has said.
Those on the proposed
list will have a chance to become candidates of members and alternate members of
the central committee, and members of the central discipline
commission.
The five-yearly congress will first hold a primary election
before a final ballot, a practice since the 13th party congress in
1987.
The personnel reshuffle is one of the most important agenda of
party congress. The constitution of the CPC rules that all election should be
carried out through secret ballot.
The CPC adopted a primary election
system at its 8th national party congress in 1956. Then at the 13th national
congress in 1987, it began to follow a differential voting system at the primary
election, hailed as a major progress in the CPC intra-party democracy.
At
that congress, five percent of nominees lost in the primary election for
candidates of members of central committee, and 12 percent of nominees lost in
the election for candidates of alternate members.
The margin of
elimination in the vote of the 14th and 15th national congresses were not
released. The 16th party congress, however, recorded a margin of elimination at
a little more than five percent.
At the 16th party congress in 2002,
members of the central committee were elected with a 5.1 percent margin, and
alternate members of the central committee, 5.7 percent. Seven people lost in
the primary vote for members of the Central Discipline Commission, marking a 5.8
percent margin.
There have been quite some speculations that the margin this time may be
higher as Hu Jintao said in his report to the congress that the party should
"expand intra-party democracy."
"We will reform the intra-party
electoral system and improve the system for nominating candidates and electoral
methods," he said in the report.
In choosing delegates prior to the
congress, all 38 constituencies adopted a 15 percent margin in the elections,
five percentage points higher than that in 2002.