Taking care of the needy
When the first national congress of the CPC was convened 86 years ago, a dozen delegates had to meet in a Shanghai back alley and ended their session drifting on a boat so as to flee police search. Attributing its rise and victory to the solid support of the bottom of the society, the Party has enshrined the images of hammer and sickle onto its flag and vowed to be the vanguards of farmers and workers.
With the lapse of time, the structure of the Party's more than 73 million membership is undergoing gradual changes, with many more coming from new social strata such as private entrepreneurs. To unleash and sustain the vitality of the Party, however, delegates said the Party must keep soberminded with the yawning wealth gap and the needs of the vulnerable.
Official data showed that the country's Gini Coefficient has surpassed the warning mark of 0.4, with the per capita GDP of eastern coastal Shanghai standing around 76,000 yuan (US$10,133), more than 13 times that of southwestern Guizhou.
Rubert Hoogewerf, a former British accountant who became well- known for his annual ranking of the China's wealthiest, exposed lately in its 2007 China Wealthiest List that 800 Chinese have made the cut-off of 800 million yuan (US$107 million) last year, up from 500 people from a year earlier. By contrast, the per capita income of rural China remains less than 3, 600 yuan (US$480) on average as official figures released.
Since common prosperity has been projected as the final objective of the CPC, delegates held that the Party must make sure the people could share the wealth fairly. "If someone with one lame leg walks too fast, soon or later he will fall," said one delegate.
Jiao Xuebai, director of the Labor and Social Securities Department of east China's Shandong Province, said the government must assume more responsibility to expand entitlement expenditure and make sure social benefits, health care and education available to the needy.
Corruption
Communist elite normally gather once every five years in Beijing, casting ballots to decide leadership reshuffle. This year, one consensus acknowledged by most delegates is that the Party leadership has play increasingly tough against corruption.
Hundreds of thousands of corrupt officials including former Shanghai party chief Chen Liangyu have been nabbed in the past five years. Last year alone, more than 90,000 members of the Party were disciplined.
But the call for enhanced crackdown has turned increasingly louder as corruption has proved often entangled with chronicle issues such as commercial bribery, coal mine accidents and arbitrary charge of fees in education and medical services.
Calling anti-corruption a national combat, they said that only after the average Chinese were mobilized to participate in the supervision of power could the Party win over the trust of the public.
Delegate Han Peixin said that supervision should target symptoms of harmful trend and establish an effective system to caution against unhealthy behavior.
"Histories and realities have repeatedly proved, any political party, if failing to prevent and curb corruption, would undoubtedly put its ruling position in peril and slip into self- destruction," said Zou Shaolu, a delegate from Yunnan.