Coordinates | 9°1′48″N38°44′24″N |
---|---|
Name | Hua Guofeng |
Nationality | Chinese |
Office | Chairman of the Communist Party of China |
Deputy | Ye Jianying |
Term start | 7 October 1976 |
Term end | 28 June 1981() |
Leader | HimselfDeng Xiaopeng |
Predecessor | Mao Zedong |
Successor | Hu Yaobang |
Office1 | Premier of the People's Republic of China |
Deputy1 | Deng Xiaoping |
Term start1 | 4 February 1976 |
Term end1 | September 1980 |
Leader1 | Mao ZedongHimselfDeng Xiaopeng |
Predecessor1 | Zhou Enlai |
Successor1 | Zhao Ziyang |
Office2 | Chairman of the CPC Central Military Commission |
Term start2 | 6 October 1976 |
Term end2 | 28 June 1981 |
Leader2 | HimselfDeng Xiaoping |
Predecessor2 | Mao Zedong |
Successor2 | Deng Xiaoping |
Office3 | First Vice Chairman of the Communist Party of China |
Term start3 | 7 April 1976 |
Term end3 | 7 October 1976 |
1blankname3 | Chairman |
1namedata3 | Mao Zedong |
Office4 | Member of theNational People's Congress |
Constituency4 | Hunan At-large (88-93) |
Term start4 | 21 December 1964 |
Term end4 | 13 January 1975 |
Birth date | February 16, 1921 |
Birth place | Jiaocheng, Shanxi, Republic of China |
Death date | August 20, 2008 |
Death place | Beijing, People's Republic of China |
Spouse | Han Zhijun (韩芝俊) |
Party | Communist Party of China |
Signature | Hua Guofeng Signature.svg }} |
Hua moved with the PLA to Hunan in 1949, where he married Han Zhijun in January, and remained there as a local official until 1971. He was appointed Party secretary for Xiangyin County in August, just before the establishment of the People's Republic of China. In 1952, he was appointed secretary of Xiangtan Special District, which included Mao's hometown, Shaoshan. In this role, he built a memorial hall dedicated to Mao. When Mao visited the site, in June 1959, he was favorably impressed. Mao Zedong first met Hua in 1955, and apparently was impressed by his simplicity.
Hua participated in the 1959 Lushan Conference (an enlarged plenary session of the CPC Central Committee) as a member of the Hunan Provincial Party delegation, and wrote two investigative reports defending communes and the Great Leap Forward.
Hua's influence increased with the Cultural Revolution, as he supported it and led the movement in Hunan. He organized the preparation for the establishment of the local Revolutionary Committee in 1967, of which he was a deputy chairman, and gained wide attention for suppressing a hard-line extremist faction. In December 1970 he was elected new chairman of the Revolutionary Committee as well as first secretary of the CPC Hunan Committee.
He was elected a full member of the 9th Central Committee in 1969.
Zhou Enlai died on 8 January 1976, at a time when Deng Xiaoping's moderate alliance was not yet strong enough to stand up to both the ailing Mao Zedong and his Cultural Revolution allies, the Gang of Four (Jiang Qing, Zhang Chunqiao, Wang Hongwen, and Yao Wenyuan). After reading the late premier's eulogy a week later, Deng left Beijing along with several close allies for the relative safety of Guangzhou.
As a compromise, Hua Guofeng was named as Acting Premier on February 8th. At the same time, the leftist-controlled media began denouncing Deng once again (he had been purged during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, and was only returned to power in 1973). Popular affection for Zhou was underestimated, however, leading to a confrontation between the radicals' militia allies and Beijing citizens seeking to honor Zhou during the traditional Qingming festival. At the same time, Hua delivered speeches on the "official line for criticizing Deng Xiaoping", which were approved by Mao and the Party Central Committee.
During the Tiananmen Incident of 1976, thousands of people protested at the militia's removal of wreaths honoring Zhou in front of the Monument to the People's Heroes. Vehicles were burned, offices ransacked and there were reports of many injuries but no deaths. In the aftermath, Deng Xiaoping was blamed for inciting the protests and stripped of all his party and government posts, albeit his party membership was retained at Mao's behest. Shortly thereafter, Hua was elevated to First Vice Chairman of the CPC Central Committee and Premier of the State Council.
On October 6, less than a month after Mao's death, anti-Gang of Four leaders with Hua at its core executed the arrest of Jiang Qing and her followers, as word came out that the Gang of Four was to soon wage a military coup against the Hua leadership of the CPC. On the same day, shortly after the death of Mao Zedong, Hua Guofeng assumed the posts of Chairman of the CPC Central Committee and the Military Affairs Commission.
Despite all of this, Hua Guofeng himself criticized certain aspects of the Cultural Revolution, including the education reform, the revolutionary committees' activity and other excesses, blaming the Gang of Four.
On October 1979, Hua went on a European tour, the first of its kind for a Chinese leader after 1949. He travelled to West Germany and France. On 28 October Hua visited Great Britain and met with British prime minister Margaret Thatcher. The two engaged in friendly talks and discussed the future of Hong Kong. Hua also went to a farm in Oxfordshire and visited Oxford University.
Hua was one of the last foreigners to visit The Shah of Iran before he was overthrown in 1979.
His interpretation of the Three Worlds Theory, leading to a general re-approachment with Western powers, divided Maoist parties throughout the world. Many of them, including Shining Path, criticized him for this and accused him of being a traitor for ousting Jiang Qing.
At the Third Plenary Session of the 11th CPC Central Committee, after which Deng Xiaoping became the de facto leader of China as his idea for economic reform was adopted by the Party, Hua Guofeng was implicitly criticized for serving concurrently as Chairman of the Central Committee, Chairman of the Central Military Commission and Premier of the State Council. This was reverted between 1980 and 1981, as the three posts were assigned to three different people, but this system was re-established by Jiang Zemin as he became paramount leader of China.
The ousting of Hua was significant in at least two respects. First, it demonstrated the unimportance of official titles in the Chinese Communist Party during the late-1970s and early-1980s. Despite being the official leader of the party, the state, and the army, Hua was unable to defeat a leadership challenge by Deng Xiaoping. Second, Hua's ousting helped establish a norm within the PRC that political leaders who lost power struggles would not be physically harmed or jailed, in contrast to the situation during the Cultural Revolution and afterwards, under the Gang of Four.
In early 2002, Hua officially lost his seat on the Central Committee of the CPC. He was, however, invited to the 17th Party Congress in 2007 as a special delegate.
Despite retaining formal party positions, Hua distanced himself from contemporary Chinese politics. His main hobby was grape cultivation, and he kept up with current affairs by subscribing to a host of newspapers. Hua's health deteriorated in 2008, and he was hospitalised three times for kidney- and heart-related complications. Hua died in Beijing on 20 August 2008. As his death occurred during the festive Beijing Olympics, it was not given much attention on state media. As Hua was a leader who had committed "political errors", he was not granted the same kind of funeral rites as other paramount leaders like Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping .
{{S-ttl|title = Chairman of the Communist Party of China |years = 1976–1981}} {{S-ttl|title = Chairman of the Central Military Commission |years = 1976–1981}} {{S-ttl|title = President of the Central Party School |years = 1977–1982}}
Category:1921 births Category:2008 deaths Category:Chinese communists Category:Communist rulers Category:Cultural Revolution people Category:Leaders of the Communist Party of China Category:Governors of Hunan Category:People from Shanxi Category:Premiers of the People's Republic of China
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