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ON STRENGTHENING THE PARTY COMMITTEE SYSTEM
September 20, 1948
[This decision was drafted by Comrade Mao Tse-tung for the Central Committee
of the Communist Party of China. ]
The Party committee system is an important Party institution for ensuring
collective leadership and preventing any individual from monopolizing the
conduct of affairs. It has recently been found that in some (of course not
all) leading bodies it is the habitual practice for one individual to monopolize
the conduct of affairs and decide important problems. Solutions to important
problems are decided not by Party committee meetings but by one individual,
and membership in the Party committee has become nominal. Differences of
opinion among committee members cannot be resolved and are left unresolved
for a long time. Members of the Party committee maintain only formal, not
real, unity among themselves. This situation must be changed. From now on,
a sound system of Party committee meetings must be instituted in all leading
bodies, from the bureaus of the Central Committee to the prefectural Party
committees; from the Party committees of the fronts to the Party committees
of brigades and military areas (sub-commissions of the Revolutionary Military
Commission or leading groups); and the leading Party members' groups in
government bodies, people's organizations, the news agency and the newspaper
offices. All important problems (of course, not the unimportant, trivial
problems, or problems whose solutions have already been decided after discussion
at meetings and need only be carried out) must be submitted to the committee
for discussion, and the committee members present should express their views
fully and reach definite decisions which should then be carried out by the
members concerned. The same procedure should be followed by Party committees
below the prefectural and brigade levels. In the higher leading bodies there
should also be meetings of the leading cadres in the departments (for ample,
the propaganda department and the organizational department), commissions
(for example, the labour women's and youth commissions), schools (for example,
Party schools) and offices (for example, the research offices). Of course,
we must see to it that the meetings are not too long or too frequent and
they must not get bogged down in discussion of petty matters lest the work
be hindered. On important problems which are complicated and on which opinions
differ, there must, in addition, be personal consultations before the meeting
to enable the members to think things over lest decisions by the meeting
become a mere formality or no decision can be reached. Party committee meetings
must be divided into two categories, standing committee meetings and plenary
sessions, and the two should not be confused. Furthermore, we must take care
that neither collective leadership nor personal responsibility is overemphasized
to the neglect of the other. In the army, the person in command has the right
to make emergency decisions during battle and when circumstances require.
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