Communist Party elite to meet from Monday to set China’s agenda
- The first full gathering of the powerful Central Committee in nearly 20 months will take place over four days
The elite of China’s ruling Communist Party will meet for their long-awaited fourth plenum from Monday, according to state media.
More than 300 full and alternate members of the party’s powerful Central Committee will gather behind closed doors for four days in Beijing to discuss how to improve the country’s socialist system and governance, according to state news agency Xinhua.
The gathering was announced on Thursday at a Politburo meeting chaired by President Xi Jinping, who is the party’s general secretary.
It is the first full meeting of the Central Committee in nearly 20 months, the longest interval between two plenums – as they are officially called – in recent decades.
The wait – seen by some China-watchers as a delay – has fuelled much speculation about discord within the party, as it grapples with headwinds from a trade war with the United States, slowing economic growth and – since this summer – a political crisis in Hong Kong.
But others argue that given the previous plenum was convened ahead of schedule, the meeting this time does not amount to a delay.