thumb|The Central People's Government Committee adopted the Draft of the Constitution of the People's Republic of China on June 14, 1954.
The 1954 Constitution of the People's Republic of China was a communist state constitution and seventh Chinese constitution adopted and enacted on September 20, 1954, through the first session of the 1st National People's Congress in Beijing. This constitution was amended and formulated on the basis of the Common Program of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, which served as a provisional constitution in 1949, and is the first constitution of the People's Republic of China. The Constitution of the People's Republic of China is the fundamental law of the People's Republic of China and has the highest legal effect.
Background
Common Program
After the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, the Common Program effectively served as the new country's "provisional constitution," The political system stipulated in the Common Program was a united front government with the participation of people from all classes and sectors, which was inconsistent with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)'s goal of establishing what it termed a "people's democratic dictatorship" led by the working class and based on a worker-peasant alliance. In terms of economy, the Common Program stipulated a state-owned economy, a cooperative economy, a private economy, and an economy of cooperation between state and private capital. It also stipulated land reform in rural areas and the implementation of the "land to the tiller" policy. By 1953, land reform in rural China had been completed.
Liu Shaoqi said: "In the history of modern China, people have long debated a fundamental question - what is the way out for China? Is it capitalism or socialism? The tremendous changes that have taken place in the country in the past five years have provided a vivid answer to this question, and at the same time fully proved that the transition from the current complex economic structure to a single socialist structure, that is, from the current new democratic society to a socialist society, is the only correct path that our country should take. If we continue to maintain the status quo, China may become capitalist. He said that perhaps some people want to take the path of maintaining the status quo, that is, neither the capitalist path nor the socialist path, and maintain the current situation. Some people hope to preserve this state forever and it is best not to change it. They say that with the Common Program, why do we need a constitution? It is impossible for the two opposite relations of production, socialism and capitalism, to develop in parallel without interfering with each other in a country. If it does not become a socialist country, it will become a capitalist country. It is absolutely impossible for it not to change. Our country is determined to take the socialist path. To take the socialist path, we need to have a legal form to define the general tasks of our country's transition period."
Stalin's third suggestion to draft a constitution was in October 1952, when Liu Shaoqi led the CCP delegation to the 19th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Entrusted by Mao Zedong, he wrote a long letter to Stalin seeking his opinion on China's transition to socialism. Stalin agreed with the CCP's idea of transitioning to socialism, but disagreed with the opinion of not drafting a constitution for the time being, and suggested that the constitution be drafted ahead of schedule.
History
Preparation
On 1 December 1952, the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party issued a "Notice on Convening the National Congress of the Party," stating that the conditions for convening the National People's Congress and drafting a constitution had been met, and preparations were underway for constitutional legislation . On 24 December 1952, at the 43rd meeting of the Standing Committee of the 1st National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, Zhou Enlai, on behalf of the CCP, proposed drafting a constitution; the CPPCC adopted this proposal.
On 1 January 1953, the People 's Daily, the official newspaper of the CCP Central Committee, listed the drafting of the Constitution as one of the three tasks for 1953. In order to win the support of the democratic parties and all sectors of society for the CCP's drafting of the Constitution, Mao Zedong convened a symposium with 18 leaders of the democratic parties on 11 January, and Zhou Enlai convened a symposium of the CPPCC on January 12. At these two meetings, opinions on the drafting of the Constitution were heard from the democratic parties and people from all walks of life. At the symposium, some leaders of the democratic parties and democratic figures raised some questions and expressed concerns about the Central Committee's eagerness to draft a constitution.
On 15 January 1954, Mao Zedong sent a telegram to Liu Shaoqi and other central leaders, listing ten types of Chinese and foreign constitutions and requesting members of the Politburo and the Central Committee members in Beijing to take time to read them.
- Chairman: Mao Zedong
- Committee members (32 people, listed in order of surname stroke count): Zhu De, Soong Ching- ling, Li Jishen, Li Weihan, He Xiangning, Shen Junru, Shen Yanbing, Zhou Enlai, Lin Boqu, Lin Feng, Hu Qiaomu, Gao Gang, Ulanhu, Ma Yinchu, Ma Xulun, Chen Yun, Chen Shutong, Chen Jiageng, Chen Boda, Zhang Lan, Guo Moruo, Xi Zhongxun, Huang Yanpei, Peng Dehuai, Cheng Qian, Dong Biwu, Liu Shaoqi, Deng Xiaoping, Deng Zihui, Saifuddin, Bo Yibo, Rao Shushi
- Secretariat (Adopted at the first plenary meeting of the Constitution Drafting Committee on March 23, 1954)
- Secretary-General: Li Weihan (concurrently)
- Deputy Secretaries-General: Qi Yanming, Tian Jiaying, Qu Wu, Hu Yuzhi, Sun Qimeng, Xu Guangping, Xin Zhichao
In January 1954, the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party decided to establish a Constitution Drafting Group to be responsible for drafting the initial draft:
- Members of the Constitution Drafting Group: Mao Zedong, Chen Boda, Hu Qiaomu, Tian Jiaying
In March 1954, the Political Bureau of the CCP Central Committee decided to establish a Constitutional Committee to revise the initial draft.
- Members of the Constitutional Committee: Chen Boda, Hu Qiaomu, Dong Biwu, Peng Zhen, Deng Xiaoping, Li Weihan, Zhang Jichun, Tian Jiaying
Adoption
On 20 September 1954, at the first session of the 1st National People’s Congress, the delegates cast a total of 1,197 votes, with 1,197 votes in favor, and the Constitution of the People’s Republic of China was adopted unanimously.
Content
The May Fourth Constitution consisted of 106 articles, including the preamble, general principles, state institutions, basic rights and obligations of citizens, national flag, national emblem, and capital.
The preface first records the achievements of the Chinese people's revolutionary struggle, and then affirms the general line of the transition period for building socialism in the country and the internal and external conditions for realizing the general line. It declared that the CCP was the leader of the front and credited it specifically with ending a "century of heroic struggle" against "imperialism, feudalism, and bureaucrat capitalism." Under this situation, China finally became a one-party state under the uncontested control of the CCP.
The first chapter in the Constitution of 1954 includes 20 articles and it deals with the general issue of defining social and economic structure. The first chapter, gave the primary definition of "the nature of regime, the structure of ownership, people's property rights and so on." The nature of the state was defined as a socialist state under what the CCP termed a "people's democratic dictatorship" based on an alliance of workers and peasants.
The third chapter indicates rights and duties of the country's citizen. It guarantees the equality of each citizen and it prohibits racial discrimination and oppression. This chapter consists of 19 articles and it protects a citizen's customs, habits and religious beliefs. The Constitution stipulates the basic rights and obligations of citizens and provides for measures to gradually expand material security. These provisions mainly include: citizens' right to equality under the law; the right to vote and to be elected; freedom of speech, publication, assembly, association, procession, demonstration, and other political freedoms, as well as freedom of religious activity; personal freedom and inviolability of residence; protection of the privacy of communications; freedom of residence and movement; the right to work and rest, and the right to material assistance; the right to education and freedom to conduct scientific research, artistic creation, and cultural activities; gender equality, protection of marriage and family, and protection of mothers and children; and the right to appeal and accuse state officials who violate the law and to obtain material compensation. It also stipulates that citizens have the sacred duty to abide by the law, protect public property, pay taxes according to law, defend the country, and perform military service.
The last chapter, which is the fourth chapter, stipulates the national flag, the national emblem and the capital of PRC.
Aftermath
On the eve of the Cultural Revolution, Liu Shaoqi, then the Chairman of the People's Republic of China, fell victim to the Red Guards. Although constitutionally Liu could only be removed by the National People's Congress, since the force of the dawning Cultural Revolution was too great, the Communist Party hierarchy intervened and expelled Liu from office. The 1954 Constitution was replaced in the midst of the Cultural Revolution by the 1975 Constitution of the People's Republic of China. Books published in the PRC since the 1980s regarded it and the 1978 Constitution with "serious errors". In the 1954 Constitution, the Chairman (now translated as president) could convene Supreme State Conferences—emergency meetings. This Presidential right was never seen again in later promulgations of the Chinese constitution.
References
External links
- The Constitution of the People's Republic of China (1954)
- The Constitution of the People's Republic of China (1954)
- The Constitution of the People's Republic of China (1954) from the Peking University Center for Legal Information
