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2nd National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party

1922 Chinese Communist Party conference From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2nd National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party
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The 2nd National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party was held in the Shanghai International Settlement at the apartment of Li Da of 625 Pude Lane, South Chengdu Road, between July 16 and July 23, 1922. The congress was attended by 12 representatives, representing 195 members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The congress succeeded the 1st National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party and preceded the 3rd National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party.[1]

Quick facts 2nd National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party 中国共产党第二次全国代表大会, Begins ...
Quick facts Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese ...
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Attendance

No credible attendance records of the event remain. When the 6th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party was held in Moscow in 1928, the attendance list was reconstructed and noted 12 names: Chen Duxiu, Zhang Guotao, Li Da, Yang Mingzhai, Luo Zhanglong, Wang Jinmei, Xu Baihao, Mao Zedong, Tan Pingshan, Li Zhenying, and Shi Cuntong.[2] However, this list, according to historians, only denoted the representatives of the congress and does not include the actual members that attended the congress in person. Mao, for instance, claimed to have received news to attend the congress, but failed to attend.[2] In an interview by American journalist Edgar Snow published in his book Red Star Over China, Mao stated that his absence was due to miscommunication.

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Agenda

Congress affirmed the adoption of the Constitution of the Chinese Communist Party among several other resolutions that were passed during the congress. This included:

  1. the Manifesto of the 2nd National Congress, which announced the CCP is a "branch of the Comintern", and clarified the responsibilities and executive powers held by each leadership position, for the creation of a "unified China" and the formation of a "Chinese democratic republic".[3]
  2. Resolution of the CCP on Imperialism and World Events;
  3. Resolution On Participation in the Comintern, where the CCP formally accepted the Twenty-one Conditions and became the Chinese branch within the Comintern, contrasting the declarations made in the 1st National Congress which proclaimed the CCP was an "ally" of the Comintern;
  4. Resolution on the United Front of Democracy;
  5. Resolution on the Affairs of "Trade Union Movements and the CCP";
  6. the Youths' Movement Resolution;
  7. the Women's Movement Resolution;
  8. the Resolution on the Constitution of the CCP, which adopted the Constitution of the CCP, formally accepting Leninist ideologies,[1] and 9 other resolutions.[4]
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Elections

Congress elected Chen, Zhang, Cai, Deng Zhongxia, and Gao Junyu to form the 2nd Central Executive Committee of the Chinese Communist Party. Another three backup members were selected. Chen was selected as the general secretary, while Cai and Zhang were given propaganda work. Congress decided to publish the weekly The Guide Weekly (Xiangdao), where Cai was nominated as the head editor.[3]

At the Congress, Xiang Jingyu was appointed to lead the Party's women's movement.[5]:99

Other issues

During the 2nd National Congress, the Party decided to establish an authoritative publication to disseminate its views on anti-imperialism and revolution.[6]:58 This resulted in the founding of The Guide Weekly in Shanghai.[6]:58–61 It was the first openly-published newspaper of the central organ of the Communist Party.[6]:58

References

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