Wei Hong | |
|---|---|
| 魏宏 | |
| Governor of Sichuan | |
| In office 29 January 2013 – 22 January 2016 | |
| Preceded by | Jiang Jufeng |
| Succeeded by | Yin Li |
| Personal details | |
| Born | May 1954 (age 71) Yinan County,Shandong, China |
| Political party | Chinese Communist Party |
| Alma mater | Changsha Railway Force College |
Wei Hong (Chinese:魏宏; born May 1954) is a Chinese politician who served as theGovernor of Sichuan between 2013 and 2016. Prior to his assuming the post of governor, he served as vice governor and head of theOrganization Department of the Chinese Communist Party in Sichuan province. He resigned as governor in 2016 following a party investigation into his conduct.
Wei Hong was born inYinan County,Shandong province.[1] He served in the railway force of thePeople's Liberation Army from November 1970 to March 1978 and joined theChinese Communist Party in June 1973. From 1978 to 1979 he studied at the Changsha Railway Force College inHunan province.[1] He studied economics at the graduate school ofSouthwestern University of Finance and Economics from 1996 to 1998.[1]
Starting in 1982 Wei worked inSichuan province; he became a political operative in 1986, joining the provincial party Organization Department. In 1997, he became deputy head of the provincial organization department, and then became theChinese Communist Party Committee Secretary ofYa'an prefecture from 2000 to 2002, during whichZhou Yongkang served as leader of the party in Sichuan. In September 2002, he became the head of theOrganization Department of the Chinese Communist Party of Sichuan province, and then joined theprovincial Party Standing Committee several months later. During his tenure at the Organization Department, he promoted Zhou Yongkang associateLi Chongxi, and also introduced then aspiring female local politicianLi Jia to Zhou; Li was later promoted to party chief ofZiyang. Zhou, who had by then ascended to the highest echelons of power in Beijing, was said to be fond of Wei, inviting him out to dinner when the latter was in Beijing.[2] Wei was named executive deputy governor of Sichuan province in May 2007.[1]
Surprisingly, however, Wei's name did not appear on the 2012 list of the provincial Standing Committee, but he held onto the post of vice governor. As then-GovernorJiang Jufeng approached retirement age, speculation placed then-deputy provincial party chief and Zhou Yongkang associateLi Chuncheng and Chengdu party chiefHuang Xinchu as the likely successors of Jiang; however, Li was placed under investigation for corruption shortly following the18th Party Congress. Wei and Li were said to have both coveted the governorship; when Li was sacked, Wei became the unwitting beneficiary. As the Sichuan political scene fell into disarray, Wei, who was neither a member nor an alternate member of the Central Committee,[3] nor even a member of theprovincial standing committee, emerged as a serious contender.[4]
In January 2013, Wei Hong succeeded Jiang asGovernor of Sichuan.[1][5] In 2015, Wei was curiously not part of the entourage ofXi Jinping's state visit to the United States; the president's important visits abroad are usually accompanied by some provincial government leaders. Sichuan was represented, unusually, by the provincial party chiefWang Dongming, sparking rumours that Wei may have been under investigation. For much of December 2015, Wei was observed to be absent in important provincial leadership meetings. On 15 January 2016,Wu Yuliang, Deputy Secretary of theCentral Commission for Discipline Inspection, disclosed under heavy questioning that Wei Hong was under investigation for "breaching discipline" and that Wei was spending some time "thinking and reflecting".[6]
On January 22, 2016, Wei resigned the post of the governor of Sichuan, the second sitting provincial governor to have fallen to the axe of theanti-corruption campaign under Xi Jinping.[7] On February 4, 2016, the CCDI announced Wei was removed from all posts and demoted to deputy department-level (futingji). In the investigation report, Wei was said to have dishonoured the party, did not "treasure chances at re-education", and "violated political, organizational and work discipline." He was nonetheless still referred to as "comrade" and did not lose his party membership.[8]
Wei's wife, Gui Jianmei (桂建梅), was an official inQingyang District, Chengdu. In January 2016, she left her post as CPPCC Party secretary of Qingyang District, a signal that she had been implicated by her husband's investigation.[9]
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Governor of Sichuan 2013–2016 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Executive Vice Governor of Sichuan 2007–2013 | Succeeded by |