Secretary-General of the Kuomintang

The secretary-general of the Kuomintang is the chief of staff of the Kuomintang, nominated by the chairperson and confirmed by the Central Committee. The position was created in 1926 and is currently held on by Justin Huang, who assumed the post in October 2021.

Secretary-General of the Kuomintang
Incumbent
Justin Huang
since 30 October 2021
Central Committee of the Kuomintang
Formation1926 (1926)

List of secretaries-general

Secretaries-general of the Central Executive Committee

  1. Yeh Ch'u-ts'ang [葉楚傖] (1926–1927)
  2. Post abolished (1927–1929)
  3. Chen Li-fu (1929–1931)
  4. Ting Wei-feng [丁惟汾] (1931)
  5. Yeh Ch'u-ts'ang (1931–1938)
  6. Chu Chia-hua (1938–1939)
  7. Yeh Ch'u-ts'ang (1939–1941)
  8. Wu Tiecheng (1941–1948)
  9. Zheng Yanfen (1948–1950)

Secretaries-general of the Central Reform Committee

  1. Chang Chi-yun (1950–1952)

Secretaries-general of the Central Committee

  1. Chang Chi-yun (1952–1954)
  2. Chang Li-sheng (1954–1959)
  3. Tang Tsung [唐縱] (1959–1964)
  4. Gu Fengxiang [谷鳳翔] (1964–1968)
  5. Chang Pao-shu [張寶樹] (1968–1979)
  6. Chiang Yen-si [蔣彥士] (1979–1985)
  7. Ma Shu-li [馬樹禮] (1985–1987)
  8. Lee Huan (1987–1989)
  9. James Soong Chu-yu (1989–1993)
  10. Hsu Shui-teh (1993–1996)
  11. Wu Po-hsiung (1996–1997)
  12. Chang Hsiao-yen (1997–1999)
  13. Huang Kun-huei (1999–2000)
  14. Lin Fong-cheng (2000–2005)
  15. Chan Chun-po (2005–2007)(2009)
  16. Wu Den-yih (2007–2009)
  17. King Pu-tsung (2009–2011)
  18. Liao Liou-yi (2011–2012)
  19. Lin Join-sane (2012)
  20. Tseng Yung-chuan (2012–2014)
  21. Hung Hsiu-chu (2014–2015 acting)
  22. Lee Shu-chuan (2015–9 May 2016)
  23. Mo Tien-hu [莫天虎] (9 May 2016 – 20 August 2017)[1]
  24. Tseng Yung-chuan (20 August 2017 – 15 January 2020)
    1. Tseng Ming-chung (15 January 2020 – 18 March 2020 acting)
  25. Lee Chien-lung (18 March 2020 – 30 October 2021)
  26. Justin Huang (since 30 October 2021)

See also

References

  1. Shih, Hsiao-kuang (7 May 2016). "KMT names intelligence agent secretary-general". Taipei Times. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.