Office: | State Councilor of the People’s Republic of China | ||||||
Alongside: | Wang Xiaohong and Shen Yiqin | ||||||
Premier: | Li Qiang | ||||||
Term Start: | 12 March 2023 | ||||||
Office1: | 14th Secretary General of the State Council | ||||||
Premier1: | Li Qiang | ||||||
Term Start1: | 12 March 2023 | ||||||
Predecessor1: | Xiao Jie | ||||||
Office2: | Communist Party Secretary of Jiangsu | ||||||
Term Start2: | 18 October 2021 | ||||||
Term End2: | 28 December 2022 | ||||||
Deputy2: | Xu Kunlin (Governor) | ||||||
Predecessor2: | Lou Qinjian | ||||||
Successor2: | Xin Changxing | ||||||
Office3: | Chairman of Jiangsu People's Congress | ||||||
Term Start3: | 23 January 2022 | ||||||
Term End3: | January 2023 | ||||||
Predecessor3: | Lou Qinjian | ||||||
Successor3: | Xin Changxing | ||||||
Office4: | Governor of Jiangsu | ||||||
Term Start4: | 31 May 2017 | ||||||
Term End4: | 19 October 2021 | ||||||
Predecessor4: | Shi Taifeng | ||||||
Successor4: | Xu Kunlin | ||||||
Office5: | Communist Party Secretary of Nanjing | ||||||
Term Start5: | October 2016 | ||||||
Term End5: | May 2017 | ||||||
Predecessor5: | Huang Lixin | ||||||
Successor5: | Zhang Jinghua | ||||||
Office6: | Communist Party Secretary of Taiyuan | ||||||
Term Start6: | September 2014 | ||||||
Term End6: | October 2016 | ||||||
Predecessor6: | Chen Chuanping | ||||||
Successor6: | Wang Weizhong | ||||||
Wu Zhenglong | |||||||
Native Name Lang: | zh | ||||||
Birth Place: | Gaochun County, Jiangsu | ||||||
Party: | Chinese Communist Party | ||||||
Alma Mater: | Taiyuan Machinery College | ||||||
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Wu Zhenglong (; born November 1964) is a Chinese politician and who is currently a state councilor and the secretary-general of the State Council. Previously, he was the Governor of Jiangsu and also served as Chinese Communist Party Committee Secretary of Nanjing and Jiangsu. Born in Jiangsu, Wu served in Chongqing, then Shanxi, earlier in his career, before being transferred back to his home province, where he experienced a series of rapid promotions.
Wu was born in Gaochun County, Jiangsu province. He graduated in 1984 from the Taiyuan Mechanical College (later renamed North University of China), where he studied machinery and equipment manufacturing, and worked in the military supply and industry ministry, before being transferred to the National Planning Commission to work as a political secretary. In 1999 he became deputy secretary-general of the Chongqing municipal government shortly after it became a direct-controlled municipality; he was then named deputy governor of Wanzhou District, then governor, then the party chief. Considered a "political survivor" in Chongqing, Wu served in the administration of then Chongqing party chief Bo Xilai, who was ousted in 2012. In May 2013 Wu was named secretary-general of the party committee, and a member of the CCP provincial standing committee of Chongqing.[1]
In 2014, Chen Chuanping was abruptly removed from office as party chief of Taiyuan as part of a corruption probe. Wu was 'parachuted' in as the new party chief of Taiyuan in August 2014; he also earned an ex officio seat on the provincial party standing committee. Wu served in Shanxi for two years, before being transferred back to his home province of Jiangsu to take on the post of deputy party chief and party chief of the provincial capital Nanjing, a clear promotion and indication that he was being groomed to higher office. In May 2017, Wu was appointed acting Governor of Jiangsu.[2] On 18 October 2021, he was promoted to Chinese Communist Party Committee Secretary of Jiangsu, the top political position in province.
Wu was a delegate to the 11th National People's Congress, elected in 2008. Wu was an alternate member of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party and a full member of the 19th Central Committee.[3]