Office1: | Mayor of Tianjin | ||||
Term Start1: | 16 September 2020 | ||||
Term End1: | 27 April 2022 | ||||
Predecessor1: | Zhang Guoqing | ||||
Successor1: | Zhang Gong | ||||
Office2: | Deputy Communist Party Secretary of Tianjin | ||||
Term Start2: | 31 August 2020 | ||||
Term End2: | 27 April 2022 | ||||
1Blankname2: | Secretary | ||||
1Namedata2: | Li Hongzhong | ||||
Office3: | Deputy Communist Party Secretary of Shanghai | ||||
Term Start3: | February 2020 | ||||
Term End3: | August 2020 | ||||
1Blankname3: | Secretary | ||||
1Namedata3: | Li Qiang | ||||
Liao Guoxun | |||||
Native Name: | 廖国勋 | ||||
Native Name Lang: | zh | ||||
Birth Date: | February 1963 | ||||
Birth Place: | Chengdu, Sichuan, China | ||||
Death Place: | Tianjin, China | ||||
Party: | Chinese Communist Party | ||||
Alma Mater: | Guizhou Normal University Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party | ||||
Module: |
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Liao Guoxun (; February 1963 – 27 April 2022)[1] was a Chinese politician who served as mayor and deputy party chief of Tianjin.[2] He was of Tujia ethnicity.
Born in Chengdu, Sichuan, he graduated from Guizhou Normal University and Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party. He began his career as a teacher in Kaili, before getting into politics in the government of Qiandongnan Miao and Dong Autonomous Prefecture. He was deputy party chief of Tongren in 2007 and one year later was promoted to party chief position. Afterwards, he was member of the CCP Standing Committees in two provincial-level administrative divisions of both Guizhou and Zhejiang and one direct-administered municipality Shanghai.[3]
He was a delegate to the 11th and 13th National People's Congress. He was a delegate to the 18th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party and was a delegate to the 19th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party.
Liao was born in Chengdu, Sichuan, in February 1963. After the resumption of National College Entrance Examination, he was accepted to Guizhou Normal University, where he majored in chemistry.
After graduating in August 1983, he was dispatched to Kaili No. 4 High School as a teacher and deputy secretary of the Communist Youth League Committee. Liao became involved in politics in January 1986, when he was transferred to the Organization Department of CPC Qiandongnan Prefecture Committee. By June 2007 when he was appointed deputy party chief and later party chief of Tongren, he had served in various posts in the General Office of CCP Guizhou Provincial Committee. In April 2012, he was elected a member of the Standing Committee of CCP Guizhou Provincial Committee at the First session of the 11th CCP Guizhou Provincial Committee, a position at vice-ministerial level.
In April 2015, he was transferred to east China's Zhejiang province and appointed head of the Organization Department of CPC Zhejiang Provincial Committee and a Provincial Standing Committee member.
A year and a half later, he was transferred to the neighboring direct-administered municipality Shanghai and appointed a member of the Standing Committee of CPC Shanghai Municipal Committee and secretary of the CPC Shanghai Municipal Commission for Discipline Inspection, the party's agency in charge of anti-corruption efforts.[4] On January 28, 2018, he was unanimously elected as director of the newly founded Shanghai Municipal Supervisory Commission, the government's agency in charge of anti-corruption efforts.[5] On February 28, 2020, he was promoted to become deputy party chief of Shanghai, a position he held until the end of August 2020.[6]
On August 31, 2020, he was appointed deputy party chief of North China's Tianjin municipality.[7] He was named acting mayor on September 3 and was installed as mayor on September 16. His last public appearance was on April 24, 2022, when he attended and spoke at the Tianjin municipal work conference on deepening pollution prevention and control.[8]
On April 27, 2022, Liao died of a sudden illness at the age of 59. His death was announced on the public account of newspaper Tianjin Daily in WeChat on the following evening, with the obituary being very brief.[9]