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Premier of China
Head of government of China
Head of government of China
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| post | Premier |
| native_name | 中华人民共和国国务院总理 |
| insignia | National Emblem of the People's Republic of China (2).svg |
| insigniacaption | National Emblem of China |
| insigniasize | 100px |
| image | Li Qiang, Premier of the People's Republic of China on October 27, 2025 (cropped).jpg |
| incumbent | Li Qiang |
| incumbentsince | 11 March 2023 |
| style | Comrade (同志) |
| (formal) | |
| His Excellency (阁下) | |
| {{small | (diplomatic) |
| type | Head of government |
| member_of | |
| status | National-level official |
| reports_to | National People's Congress and its Standing Committee |
| residence | Premier's Office, Zhongnanhai, Beijing |
| seat | Beijing |
| nominator | President |
| (chosen within the Chinese Communist Party) | |
| appointer | National People's Congress |
| termlength | Five years, renewable once consecutively |
| constituting_instrument | Constitution of China |
| precursor | Premier of the Government Administration Council of the Central People's Government |
| formation | (Premier of the Imperial Cabinet) |
| (Republican era) | |
| (Premier of the Government Administration Council of the Central People's Government) | |
| (Premier of the State Council) | |
| unofficial_names | Prime Minister |
| salary | CN¥ per annum (2015) |
| deputy | Vice Premier |
| State councillor | |
| inaugural | Yikuang (Qing dynasty) |
| Zhou Enlai (current form) | |
| body | the State Council of the People's Republic of China |
| flag | Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg |
| flagsize | 125px |
| flagcaption | Flag of China |
| department | State Council of the People's Republic of China |
(formal) His Excellency (阁下) {{small|(diplomatic) (chosen within the Chinese Communist Party) (Republican era) (Premier of the Government Administration Council of the Central People's Government) (Premier of the State Council) State councillor Zhou Enlai (current form)
The premier of China, officially the Premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China, is the head of government of the People's Republic of China (PRC) and leader of the State Council, the executive organ of the National People's Congress and highest administrative organ of state power.
The post of prime minister was established in 1911 near the end of the Qing dynasty. After the PRC was established in 1949, the premier of the Government Administration Council of the Central People's Government was established. With the adoption of a constitution in 1954, the post was renamed into the premier of the State Council. The premier is the third-highest ranking official in China's political system after the general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (party leader) and the president (state representative), and holds the highest rank in the civil service of the central government. Since 1993, the positions of general secretary and president have been held by the same person, making the premier effectively the second-highest ranking official in practice.
The premier presides over the plenary and executive meetings of the State Council, and assumes overall leadership over the State Council's work. The premier delivers a government work report at the annual session of the National People's Congress (NPC). The premier also signs administrative regulations passed by the State Council and signs the orders approving the appointment and removal of vice-ministerial level officials of the State Council, as well as chief executives of Hong Kong and of Macau. The premier additionally has the authority to impose martial law. The premier is assisted by four vice premiers and state councillors in their duties. The premier heads the Leading Party Members Group of the State Council. In China's political system, the premier has generally been considereed to be the one responsible for managing the economy.
The premier is constitutionally appointed by the NPC after being nominated by the president, and responsible to NPC and its Standing Committee. The premier serves for a five-year term, renewable once consecutively. Every premier has been a member of the CCP Politburo Standing Committee since the PRC's founding in 1949, except during brief transition periods. The incumbent premier is Li Qiang, who took office on 11 March 2023, succeeding Li Keqiang.
History
Main article: List of premiers of the People's Republic of China
In the early 1900s, the Qing dynasty government began implementing constitutional reform in China in order to prevent a revolution. The reforms included the Outline of the Imperial Constitution passed in 1908, which ordered that elections for provincial assemblies must be held within a year. In May 1911, the government replaced the Grand Council with a thirteen-member cabinet, led by Prince Qing, who was appointed Prime Minister of the Imperial Cabinet. However, the cabinet included nine Manchus, seven of whom were members of the imperial clan. This "Princes' Cabinet" was unpopular among the people and was viewed as a reactionary measure, being described at one point as "the old Grand Council under the name of a cabinet, autocracy under the name of constitutionalism."
When the Wuchang Uprising broke out in November 1911, the imperial court summoned the general Yuan Shikai to command the Beiyang Army and put down the revolution. He was named Prime Minister on 2 November 1911, shortly after Prince Qing stepped down. He remained in that office until March 1912, when he negotiated with Empress Dowager Longyu the abdication of the Xuantong Emperor. However, the post was briefly revived in July 1917 during Zhang Xun's attempt to restore the Qing monarchy, but he only held it for several days before Beijing was retaken by Republican forces.
Following the collapse of the Qing, the premier of the Republic of China was created as Premier of the Cabinet (內閣總理) in 1912. It was changed to the Secretary of State (國務卿) in 1914 and Premier of State Council (國務總理) in 1916 in the Beiyang Government. In 1928, the Kuomintang (KMT) Government established the Executive Yuan and Tan Yankai served as the first president of the Executive Yuan. It was formalized in 1947 after the Constitution of the Republic of China was passed. The post was abolished in Mainland China, but continued on Taiwan since 1949.
People's Republic of China
The PRC post was initially established by Organic Law of the Central People's Government, passed by the first plenary session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in 29 September 1949, as the premier of the Government Administration Council of the Central People's Government. Zhou Enlai was appointed as premier immediately after the proclamation of the People's Republic of China in 1 October 1949. With the adoption of a constitution in 1954, the post was renamed into the premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China.
Since the 1980s, there has been a division of responsibilities between the premier and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) general secretary wherein the premier is responsible for the economy and the technical details of implementing government policy while the general secretary gathers the political support necessary for government policy. However, this was seen by observers to be overturned under the leadership of CCP general secretary Xi Jinping, who has centralized power around himself, and has taken responsibility over areas that were traditionally the domain of Premier Li Keqiang, including the economy.
The premier was historically chosen within the CCP through deliberations by incumbent Politburo members and retired CCP Politburo members as part of the process of determining membership in the incoming new CCP Politburo Standing Committee. Under this informal process, the eventual future premier is initially chosen as a vice premier before assuming the position of premier during a subsequent round of leadership transitions. This changed under Xi, with his ally and current premier Li Qiang never having served as vice premier. Under Li Qiang's tenure, the premier's political status was seen as having risen again.
Selection
Officially, the premier is appointed by the National People's Congress (NPC) upon the nomination of the president. The NPC also has the power to remove the premier and other state officers from office. Elections and removals are decided by majority vote. In practice, the premier is chosen within the CCP leadership, including the Politburo Standing Committee. Candidates for top positions including the premier are first approved first by the CCP's Politburo Standing Committee, and then by its Politburo, then approved in a special plenary session the Central Committee just before the NPC session for vote by the Congress, with the president nominating the candidate during the NPC session.
The length of the premier's term of office is the same as the NPC, which is 5 years, and the premier is restricted to two consecutive terms. Immediately after the election, the president signs the presidential order formalizing the premier's appointment. Since 2018, the premier is required to recite the constitutional oath of office before assuming office.
Powers and duties
The premier is the highest administrative position in the government of China. The premier heads the State Council and is responsible for organizing and administering the Chinese civil bureaucracy. For example, the premier is tasked with planning and implementing national economic and social development and the state budget. The premier has always been a member of the Politburo Standing Committee of the Chinese Communist Party. The premier leads the Leading Party Members Group, which responsible for overseeing the implementation of CCP Central Committee policies in the State Council.
The premier's duties includes overseeing the various ministries, departments, commissions and statutory agencies. The premier can also propose the establishment, merger or dissolution of ministries, which would then be decided upon by the NPC or its Standing Committee. The premier officially nominated the candidates for vice premiers, state councillors, ministerial offices and the secretary-general of the State Council for appointment by the NPC. The vice premiers assist the premier in their duties. The first-ranked vice premier acts in the premier's capacity in their absence. The premier also signs the order approving the appointments or removals of State Council officials at the deputy-ministerial level, as well as the Chief Executive of Hong Kong and the Chief Executive of Macau.
The premier chairs the plenary and executive meetings of the State Council. The executive meetings include the premier, vice premiers, state councillors and the secretary-general of the State Council, and are held two or three times a month, and can be held in any time if necessary. The Premier can call Work Meetings in order to issue instructions; these meetings were abolished in 2003 but were reintroduced in 2023. The premier also chairs the bimonthly special study sessions, which highlight an area for the State Council to study. The State Council has the authority to issue proposals to the NPC and its Standing Committee, which must be approved by the premier. It can also draft or abolish administrative regulations, which are then signed into order and promulgated by the premier. The premier delivers a government work report at the annual session of the NPC.
The premier does not have command authority over the armed forces, but is generally the head of the National Defense Mobilization Commission which is a department of the armed forces. The State Council has the authority to impose martial law in subdivisions below the provincial-level administrative divisions, which the premier then proclaims in an order; premier Li Peng once used the authority to impose martial law in parts of Beijing and to order the military crackdown of the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989.
List of premiers
; Generations of leadership:
| Portrait | Name | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Birth–Death) | ||||||||||||||
| Constituency | Term of office | NPC | State Council | President | Paramount leader | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |
| [[File:Premier Chou En-Lai in the Great Hall of the People's Banquet Hall - DPLA - a40021a8100507bc7a244420481bf488.jpg | 100px]] | **Zhou Enlai** | ||||||||||||
| 周恩来 | ||||||||||||||
| (1898–1976) | ||||||||||||||
| Beijing Delegation | 1 October 1949 | 15 September 1954 | *CP* | Zhou I | Mao Zedong | |||||||||
| 27 September 1954 | 18 April 1959 | [I](1st-national-people-s-congress) | Zhou II | Mao Zedong | ||||||||||
| 18 April 1959 | 21 December 1964 | [II](2nd-national-people-s-congress) | Zhou III | Liu Shaoqi | Mao Zedong | |||||||||
| 21 December 1964 | 4 January 1975 | [III](3rd-national-people-s-congress) | Zhou IV | Liu Shaoqi then *vacant* | Mao Zedong | |||||||||
| 4 January 1975 | 8 January 1976† | [IV](4th-national-people-s-congress) | Zhou V | *Abolished* | Mao Zedong | |||||||||
| [1954 Geneva Conference](1954-geneva-conference), Bandung Conference, [1972 Nixon visit to China](1972-nixon-visit-to-china), Great Leap Forward, Cultural Revolution, introduction of Four Modernizations during Conference on Scientific and Technological Work | ||||||||||||||
| *Offices*: Minister of Foreign Affairs (1949–1958), CPPCC Chairman (1954–1976) | ||||||||||||||
| †Died in office (cancer) | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Musée de Bretagne - Hua Guofeng 197904-02 (cropped).jpg | 100px]] | **Hua Guofeng** | ||||||||||||
| 华国锋 | ||||||||||||||
| (1921–2008) | ||||||||||||||
| Hunan Delegation | 31 January 1976 | 7 April 1976 | [IV](4th-national-people-s-congress) | (*acting*) | *Abolished* | Mao Zedong | ||||||||
| 7 April 1976 | 5 March 1978 | Hua I | *Abolished* | Himself | ||||||||||
| 5 March 1978 | 10 September 1980§ | [V](5th-national-people-s-congress) | Hua II | *Abolished* | Deng Xiaoping | |||||||||
| Two Whatevers, [Tiananmen Incident](1976-tiananmen-incident), Smashing the Gang of Four, Sino-Vietnamese War, One Child Policy | ||||||||||||||
| *Offices*: Governor of Hunan (1970–1976), Minister of Public Security (1975–1977), Vice Premier (1975–1976) | ||||||||||||||
| § Ousted | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Zhao Ziyang (1985).jpg | 100px]] | **Zhao Ziyang** | ||||||||||||
| 赵紫阳 | ||||||||||||||
| (1919–2005) | ||||||||||||||
| Beijing Delegation | 10 September 1980 | 6 June 1983 | [V](5th-national-people-s-congress) | (*acting*) | *Abolished* | Deng Xiaoping | ||||||||
| 6 June 1983 | 24 November 1987§ | [VI](6th-national-people-s-congress) | Zhao | Li Xiannian | Deng Xiaoping | |||||||||
| Reform and opening up, Sino-British Joint Declaration, Joint Declaration on the Question of Macau | ||||||||||||||
| *Offices*: Governor of Guangdong (1974–1975), Governor of Sichuan (1975–1980) | ||||||||||||||
| § Resigned | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Lipeng.jpg | 100px]] | **Li Peng** | ||||||||||||
| 李鹏 | ||||||||||||||
| (1928–2019) | ||||||||||||||
| Beijing Delegation | 24 November 1987 | 25 March 1988 | [VI](6th-national-people-s-congress) | (*acting*) | Li Xiannian | Deng Xiaoping | ||||||||
| 25 March 1988 | 15 March 1993 | [VII](7th-national-people-s-congress) | Li P. I | Yang Shangkun | Deng Xiaoping | |||||||||
| Jiang Zemin | ||||||||||||||
| 15 March 1993 | 17 March 1998 | [VIII](8th-national-people-s-congress) | Li P. II | Jiang Zemin | ||||||||||
| Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, Three Gorges Dam, Transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong | ||||||||||||||
| *Offices*: Chairman of State Education Commission (1985–1988), Vice Premier (1983–1987) | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Prem. Rongji at a Press Conference (1999) (cropped).jpg | 100px]] | **Zhu Rongji** | ||||||||||||
| 朱镕基 | ||||||||||||||
| (1928–) | ||||||||||||||
| Hunan Delegation | 17 March 1998 | 16 March 2003 | [IX](9th-national-people-s-congress) | Zhu | Jiang Zemin | |||||||||
| Accession to the World Trade Organization, signing of China-ASEAN Free Trade Area agreement, extensive reform of the tax system, reform of the civil service examination system, opening senior- and mid-level government positions to public selection based on merit, cutting bureaucratic waste and red tape, investing state capital in transportation, energy and agriculture, execution purge of corrupt provincial politicians who misallocated infrastructure and agriculture funds. | ||||||||||||||
| *Offices*: Mayor of Shanghai (1987–1991), Governor of the People's Bank of China (1993–1995), First-ranking Vice Premier (1993–1998) | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Wen Jiabao (Cropped).jpg | 100px]] | **Wen Jiabao** | ||||||||||||
| 温家宝 | ||||||||||||||
| (1942–) | ||||||||||||||
| Gansu Delegation | 16 March 2003 | 16 March 2008 | [X](10th-national-people-s-congress) | Wen I | Hu Jintao | |||||||||
| 16 March 2008 | 15 March 2013 | [XI](11th-national-people-s-congress) | Wen II | Hu Jintao | ||||||||||
| [SARS outbreak](2002-2004-sars-outbreak), Anti-Secession Law, H5N1 avian flu outbreak, [2008 Sichuan earthquake](2008-sichuan-earthquake), [Beijing Summer Olympics](2008-summer-olympics), Shanghai Expo, expansion of healthcare insurance coverage, abolishment long-standing agricultural tax because of rural discontent and increasing wealth gap. | ||||||||||||||
| *Offices*: Vice Premier (1998–2003) | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Pedro Sánchez and Li Keqiang at the 12th Asia-Europe Summit (1) (cropped).jpg | 100px]] | **Li Keqiang** | ||||||||||||
| 李克强 | ||||||||||||||
| (1955–2023) | ||||||||||||||
| Shandong Delegation (until 2018) | ||||||||||||||
| Guangxi Delegation (from 2018) | 15 March 2013 | 18 March 2018 | [XII](12th-national-people-s-congress) | Li K. | Xi Jinping | |||||||||
| 18 March 2018 | 11 March 2023 | [XIII](13th-national-people-s-congress) | Xi Jinping | |||||||||||
| [2014 Ludian earthquake](2014-ludian-earthquake), COVID-19 pandemic, [Beijing Winter Olympics](2022-winter-olympics), comprehensively deepening reforms, common prosperity, streamline administration and delegate power. | ||||||||||||||
| *Offices*: First-ranking Vice Premier (2008–2013) | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Li Qiang 2023 España.jpg | 100px]] | **Li Qiang** | ||||||||||||
| 李强 | ||||||||||||||
| (1958–) | ||||||||||||||
| Yunnan Delegation | 11 March 2023 | *Incumbent* | [XIV](14th-national-people-s-congress) | Li Q. | Xi Jinping | |||||||||
| *Offices*: Governor of Zhejiang (2012–2016) |
Timeline
PlotArea = top:10 bottom:50 right:130 left:20 AlignBars = late
Define $today =
DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy Period = from:01/01/1949 till:$today TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1949
Colors = id:pres value:rgb(1,0,0) id:vac value:rgb(0,1,0)
BarData = barset:PM
PlotData= width:8 align:left fontsize:S shift:(5,-4) anchor:till barset:PM
from: 01/10/1949 till: 08/01/1976 color:pres text:"Zhou" fontsize:10 from: 08/01/1976 till: 04/02/1976 color:vac text:"vacant" fontsize:10 from: 04/02/1976 till: 10/09/1980 color:pres text:"Hua" fontsize:10 from: 10/09/1980 till: 24/11/1987 color:pres text:"Zhao" fontsize:10 from: 24/11/1987 till: 17/03/1998 color:pres text:"Li P." fontsize:10 from: 17/03/1998 till: 15/03/2003 color:pres text:"Zhu" fontsize:10 from: 15/03/2003 till: 15/03/2013 color:pres text:"Wen" fontsize:10 from: 15/03/2013 till: 11/03/2023 color:pres text:"Li K." fontsize:10 from: 11/03/2023 till: $today color:pres text:"Li Q." fontsize:10
References
References
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- "The Organic Law of the Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China".
- Liu, Juliana. (2015-12-30). "Zhou Enlai: Was Communist China's first premier gay?". [[BBC News]].
- Chang, Yu-Nan. (1956). "The Chinese Communist State System Under the Constitution of 1954". [[The Journal of Politics]].
- Wei, Lingling. (2022-05-11). "China's Forgotten Premier Steps Out of Xi's Shadow as Economic Fixer". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
- (21 November 2012). "China's backroom power brokers block reform candidates". [[South China Morning Post]].
- (31 December 2022). "Xi loyalist set to become China premier without stint as deputy". [[Nikkei Asia]].
- Thomas, Neil. (2025-06-04). "Li Qiang's Quiet Rise".
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- He, Alex. (December 2018). "The Emerging Model of Economic Policy Making under Xi Jinping".
- (13 December 2007). "Organic Law of the State Council of the People's Republic of China".
- (27 October 2022). "China's top legislature 'deliberates' on new nominations, as leadership reshuffle stokes market turmoil". [[South China Morning Post]].
- Zheng, William. (28 March 2023). "New work rules for China's State Council put the party firmly in charge". [[South China Morning Post]].
- Li, David Daokui. (2024). "China's World View: Demystifying China to Prevent Global Conflict". [[W. W. Norton & Company]].
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