Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| Che Jun | |
|---|---|
| Name | Che Jun |
| Native name | 车俊 |
| Office | Communist Party Secretary of Zhejiang |
| Term start | July 2016 |
| Term end | August 2020 |
| Predecessor | Xia Baolong |
| Successor | Yuan Jiajun |
| Birth date | July 1955 |
| Birth place | Huoqiu County, Anhui, China |
| Party | Chinese Communist Party (1973–2021; expelled) |
| Alma mater | Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party |
Che Jun is a former Chinese politician who served in senior regional roles, most notably as the Communist Party Secretary of Zhejiang. His career, which spanned over four decades within the Chinese Communist Party, was primarily associated with local governance in Anhui, Hebei, Xinjiang, and Zhejiang before ending in a high-profile disciplinary investigation. His downfall marked a significant case within the broader anti-corruption campaign under Xi Jinping.
Che Jun was born in July 1955 in Huoqiu County, a locality within Anhui province. He began his working life in 1973, initially serving as an "educated youth" sent to the countryside during the Cultural Revolution, a common experience for his generation. He joined the Chinese Communist Party in the same year, commencing his long political affiliation. His early career was spent in local agricultural and administrative roles within Anhui. For his formal political education, Che Jun attended the Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party, an institution responsible for training mid- and high-level officials, where he completed a graduate program.
Che Jun's political career advanced steadily through posts in his home province of Anhui. He served as the Party Secretary of Hefei, the provincial capital, and later rose to become a member of the Anhui Provincial Committee and head of the provincial Organization Department. In 2005, his portfolio expanded significantly when he was transferred to Hebei province, where he served as the Deputy Party Secretary and later as the acting Governor of Hebei. A major turning point came in 2010 when he was appointed as the Deputy Party Secretary of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, a sensitive frontier region, and also served as the Political Commissar of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps.
In July 2016, Che Jun was transferred to the economically vital coastal province of Zhejiang, succeeding Xia Baolong as its top official, the Communist Party Secretary of Zhejiang. His tenure focused on continuing the province's development model, emphasizing the growth of the digital economy and private enterprise, sectors for which Zhejiang, home to corporate giants like Alibaba Group, is nationally renowned. He also oversaw provincial initiatives aligned with major national strategies such as the Belt and Road Initiative and the integrated development of the Yangtze River Delta. During this period, he concurrently served as a member of the 19th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.
Che Jun's career ended abruptly in August 2020 when he was removed from his position in Zhejiang and replaced by Yuan Jiajun. In February 2021, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the party's top anti-graft agency, announced he was under formal investigation for "serious violations of discipline and law," the standard phrasing for corruption allegations. By September 2021, he had been expelled from the Chinese Communist Party. The disciplinary notice accused him of forming political cliques, illegally accepting gifts, and abusing his power to seek benefits for others in business and personnel appointments. His case was subsequently transferred to the Supreme People's Procuratorate for criminal prosecution.
Little detailed information about Che Jun's personal life has been made public, consistent with the typical privacy surrounding Chinese officials. His career trajectory, from rural Anhui to leadership in multiple provinces and an autonomous region, was a defining feature of his public profile until his dismissal. The circumstances of his downfall and the specific charges against him have become the most prominent aspects of his biography in official records.
Category:1955 births Category:Living people Category:Chinese Communist Party politicians from Anhui Category:Disgraced Chinese Communist Party officials