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Liu Shaoqi

Liu Shaoqi
Liu Shaoqi:Liu Shaoqi

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In office
27 April, 1959 – 31 October, 1968
Preceded by Mao Zedong
Succeeded by vacant, Li Xiannian

Born 24 November, 1898
Died 12 November, 1969
Political party Communist Party of China


This is a Chinese name; the family name is 劉 (Liu)

Liu Shaoqi (Simplified Chinese: 刘少奇; Traditional Chinese: 劉少奇; pinyin: Liú Shàoqí; Wade-Giles: Liu Shao-ch'i) (November 24 1898November 12 1969) was a Chinese Communist leader. He was President of the People's Republic of China April 27 1959 - October 31 1968.

Born into a rich peasant family in Yinshan, Hunan province (near Mao's Shaoshan), Liu attended the same school as Mao Zedong in Changsha, and then went to the Soviet Union and received his university education at the University of the Toilers of the East in Moscow. In 1921 he joined the newly formed CCP. He went back to China in 1922, and led several railway workers' strikes. During the period of 1925 to 1926, he led many political campaigns and strikes in Hubei and Shanghai. In 1927 he was elected to the Party's Central Committee.

In 1932 Liu became the Party Secretary in Fujian Province. Two years later he joined the Long March and was one of the supporters of Mao Zedong during the Zunyi Conference. In 1936 he was Party Secretary in North China, leading the anti-Japanese movements in that area. He was elected as the CPC General Secretary in 1943 (this was a secondary position under the Party Chairman, Mao Zedong). During the Civil War, Liu was the Deputy Chairman of the Party.

After the establishment of the People's Republic of China, Liu worked mainly in economic areas. An orthodox Soviet-style Communist, he favoured state planning and the development of heavy industry. He was therefore skeptical about Mao's Great Leap Forward movement which began in 1958. Alerted by his sister to the developing famine in rural areas in 1960, he became a determined opponent of Mao's policies. In the wake of the Great Leap Forward's catastrophic failure he replaced Mao as Chairman of the People's Republic, and began to be seen as Mao's likely successor. His more moderate economic policies help to lead China from the depths of the Great Leap Forward. Liu Shaoqi favoured the introduction of piece work, greater wage differentials and other measures that sought to undermine collective farms and factories.

Liu Shaoqi:A Chinese anti-Liu Shaoqi poster dated 1968. It reads, "The renegade, traitor and scab Liu Shaoqi must forever be expelled from the Party!"
A Chinese anti-Liu Shaoqi poster dated 1968. It reads, "The renegade, traitor and scab Liu Shaoqi must forever be expelled from the Party!"

Half way through the 1960s, however, Mao rebuilt his position in the Party and in 1966 he launched the Cultural Revolution as a means of destroying his enemies in the Party: Liu and Deng Xiaoping, along with many others, were denounced as "capitalist roaders." Liu was labeled as a "traitor", "scab", and "the biggest capitalist roader in the Party". In July 1966 he was displaced as Party Deputy Chairman by Lin Biao. By 1967 Liu and his wife Wang Guangmei were under house arrest in Beijing.

Liu was removed from all his positions and expelled from the Party in October 1968 and disappeared from view. Only after Mao's death in 1976 was it revealed Liu had been confined under terrible conditions in an isolated cell in Kaifeng, which led to his death from "medical neglect" (untreated diabetes and pneumonia) in 1969.

After Deng Xiaoping came to power in 1978, Liu was politically rehabilitated (in February 1980), with a belated state funeral over a decade after his death.

Liu's best known writings include How to be a Good Communist (1939), On the Party (1945), and Internationalism and Nationalism (1952).


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References

Preceded by:
Mao Zedong
Chairman (President) of the People's Republic of China
1959–1968
Succeeded by:
Li Xiannian
position vacant 1968–1983
Head of State of the People's Republic of China
1959–1968
Succeeded by:
Dong Biwu and Song Qingling
edit Presidents of the People's Republic of China Liu Shaoqi:Flag of People's Republic of China
Mao Zedong - Liu Shaoqi - Li Xiannian - Yang Shangkun - Jiang Zemin - Hu Jintao

Categories


1898 births | 1969 deaths | Chinese World War II people | Cultural Revolution people | Leaders of the Communist Party of China | People from Hunan

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