1909 Chinese provincial elections
The Qing dynasty held its first set of provincial assembly elections from February to June 1909. Following a lengthy period of political turmoil and the failure of the 1898 Hundred Days' Reform, the constitutionalist movement gained approval from the imperial court and Empress Dowager Cixi in the aftermath of the Boxer Rebellion. Following administrative and bureaucratic reform, such as the abolition of the imperial examination system in 1905, the Qing government created the Constitutional Commission in preparation for a twelve-year transition from absolutism to a constitutional monarchy. Seeing local self-governance as a valuable initial step towards constitutionalism, the Commission received imperial approval in 1907 to create provincial assemblies.
The following year, an indirect election system was outlined to fill these assemblies, with electoral districts drawn from the existing administrative divisions of prefectures, counties, and districts. They would be held in 21 of the country's 22 provinces; Xinjiang elections were postponed due to low rates of Chinese literacy. Suffrage and candidacy was limited to a small population of wealthy men, most of whom were members of the scholar-gentry. Public attitudes towards the elections were generally apathetic, even among those eligible to vote. Corruption, election fraud, and vote buying were common across the country. Potential voters were hesitant to provide election officials with proof of their property holdings, fearing that registration would lead to increased taxation. Turnout greatly varied between provinces and regions, but was generally low; while 40–70% of eligible voters in Jiangsu participated, rural areas of Fujian saw only 10–20% turnout. As a factor of the total population of the provinces, turnout varied from 0.19% and 0.62%.
The elected provincial assemblies were composed largely of constitutionalists, which were often divided between progressive and conservative wings. Some assemblymen were clandestine members of the Tongmenghui revolutionary organization, although firm numbers are unknown. The assemblies agitated for a variety of economic and political reforms, which brought them into conflict with the provincial governors, who held veto power over the bodies. Before another set of elections could be held, the 1911 Revolution saw the collapse of the dynasty and the creation of the Republic of China. The first provincial elections under the new government would be held in 1912.
Background
[edit]Since the Song dynasty (960–1279), positions within the Imperial Chinese bureaucracy and civil governance were filled through the imperial examination system, merging the educational and political systems.[1] This system was carried through to the late Qing dynasty, although it had come under increasing intellectual opposition as corrupt and ineffective during the late 1800s. As it entered the 20th century, the Qing empire was in social and political turmoil. Despite the repression of the Hundred Days' Reform in 1898, the constitutionalist movement continued to advocate for the creation of a constitutional monarchy in lieu of Qing absolutism. The essayist Liang Qichao emerged as the movement's most influential leader.[2][3][4]
In June 1905, prominent imperial officials Yuan Shikai, Zhang Zhidong, and Zhou Fu jointly submitted a call for the creation of a constitutional monarchy.[5] The de facto head of state Empress Dowager Cixi, previously opposed to the reform movement, had begun to grow sympathetic in the wake of China's humiliation in the Boxer Rebellion and the upset victory of the constitutionalist Empire of Japan during the Russo-Japanese War.[2] Administrative, bureaucratic, and judicial reforms were the first major focus; redundant and archaic offices were abolished, the functions of the Six Boards were transferred to a new set of civil ministries, and the three northeastern Provinces were integrated into the administrative framework of the other provinces.[6]
The Qing government reduced the frequency of the imperial exams and began to promote a western-style education system; when this met resistance by local gentry, the examination system was abolished entirely in 1905. The government initially attended to replace the imperial examinations with a new form of civil service exam; however, little progress was made in the creation of such a system. Instead, elections began to be pursued by the central government as an alternative to examinations.[2][3][7]
Creation of provincial assemblies
[edit]Proposals for local and provincial assemblies were raised following the end of the Hundred Days' Reform. In the first few years of the 1900s, reformist and revolutionary thinkers such as Sun Yat-sen, Ho Kai, and Kang Youwei began to advocate for the creation of such assemblies, citing both western systems of local governance and the traditional principle of Fengjian.[8] As the central government began to embrace the constitutional movement, reformist officials began to advocate for the establishment of local self-governance as a preliminary step towards the creation of a constitutional government.[9]
In 1907, the Grand Council established the Constitutional Commission to begin a twelve-year constitutional reform process, inspired by Japan's Meiji Restoration and constitution.[2][10] Under the supervision of Yuan Shikai, the Tianjin County Council held the first western-style elections in Chinese history in August 1907.[11] Following a proposal by Yuan in July, on 19 October the Constitutional Commission received imperial assent to organize provincial assemblies (谘议局; Zīyìjú),[a] in preparation for the establishment of a national assembly (資政院; Zīzhèngyuàn) and proper provincial legislatures.[13][14][12] Following this, various provinces (including Jiangsu, Guangdong, Guangxi, and Fengtian) created unelected provincial assemblies with appointees from the local gentry.[15]
Procedures and preparations
[edit]In July 1908, the central court produced two sets of regulations for the implementation of provincial assemblies and their elections. The "Regulations for Provincial Assembly Elections" was an 115-clause document which established qualifications for candidates and set in place the electoral processes. The provincial assembly elections were indirect elections via an electoral college; voters would vote on a slate of electors, who would in turn elect the provincial assemblymen. In addition to their provincial duties, these assemblymen would elect the members of the National Assembly in a separate election later in the year.[2][16][17]
Both voters and elector candidates were subject to the same set of requirements, beyond a minimum age of 25 for voters and 30 for electors. To be eligible to vote or run, citizens were required to have either taught at above the primary level for at least three years, graduated from a secondary school, previously held the imperial examination rank of gongsheng (貢生), held a post at or above the seventh rank of the civil service or the fifth rank of the military, or wealth (either through a business or land holdings) judged at above 5,000 yuan. Criminals, opium users, police officers, students, priests, and those with family members in disreputable careers were barred from voting or standing as candidates.[16][18][19] Women were additionally barred from voting.[20]
Following the promulgation of these regulations, preparatory offices were formed in each province; these were staffed by a mix of existing officials and the scholar-gentry. Although the abolition of the examination system prevented citizens from becoming part of the gentry, the class still held immense influence. Including their family members, slightly under two percent of the population were members of the gentry by the late 19th century; although the majority had reached this status through the examination system, an increasing number had purchased gentry status from the central government, at a cost which had been dramatically lowered in the decades following the Taiping Rebellion.[21][22] Officials were often forced to give concessions — in the form of leadership positions within the preparatory offices — to local gentry in order to guarantee coöperation.[21]
Electoral divisions followed provincial administrative subdivisions of prefectures, counties, and districts. Seats were allotted to these according to the quota of students enrolled at prefecture, department, and county schools. Manchu bannermen were also allocated seats. The central government initially planned twenty-three provincial assemblies, one for each province,[b] with Jiangsu divided into a northern assembly in Suzhou and a northern assembly in Nanjing. The two Jiangsu assemblies were dropped due to local pressure, while an assembly for Xinjiang was postponed due to extremely low rates of Chinese literacy.[16][17][24]
Campaign
[edit]The public was generally apathetic towards the elections. Only one voting station existed in each electoral district, often many miles apart. Citizens who were eligible through their wealth were often hesitant to give their property value to register, fearing that they would come under target from tax collectors. Preparatory office officials made an effort to emphasis that the voter census would not be a precursor to new taxation.[26][27] In Shandong, Shanxi, and Yunnan, lecturers were sent to inform voters of the electoral population and attempt to increase participation.[28] As the infant Xuantong Emperor had ascended to the throne after voter registration had begun, many registered voters were listed with names violating the new name taboo; in southern Jiangsu, those who could not be contacted to change their names in time had their names changed by the election preparatory office.[18]
Corruption, election fraud, and vote buying were frequent across the country. Some voters in Yangzhou, Jiangsu, were found to have voted by proxy, while some unqualified voters were allowed to cast ballots in Anhui. Votes cast in Ansu, Zhili, were decided by village brawls. In Houguan County, the results of two districts were voided due to suspicious polling booth supervision.[29] In contrast, the North China Herald reported a relatively well-organized election in Shanxi.[30]
Results
[edit]In most provinces, turnout was low even among the eligible population. Out of 21,073 registered voters in Shuntian Prefecture (containing Beijing), only a little over 1,500 votes were cast. Somewhere between 40–70% of eligible voters in Jiangsu participated; in Fujian, turnout was as high as 40% in the cities, while ranging from 10–20% in the rural countryside.[28][31] Foreign eyewitnesses reported very low enthusiasm and participation within much of the country.[29]
Assembly composition
[edit]Members of the provincial assemblies were largely scholar-gentry, especially those with advanced degrees. Out of a set of five assemblies with known member compositions, a slight majority of members were higher-ranking gentry, with only about 10% from non-gentry backgrounds. A small but prominent percentage of members had studied outside of China‚ mainly in Japan; Japanese-educated members were most numerous in the Sichuan assembly.[32][33] The average age of the elected candidates was 41.[34]
The vast majority of members elected were constitutionalists. Although they formed a broad opposition bloc to revolutionary groups such as the Tongmenghui, they were not a unified faction; the Shandong and Guizhou assemblies quickly fell into factional conflict between conservative and progressive wings. Many of the progressive constitutionalists were younger and had studied abroad.[35] A small fraction of the assemblymen were secretly affiliated with the Tongmenghui; although precise figures and membership is unknown, at least four members of the Sichuan assembly were Tongmenghui members, as well as Shaanxi assembly vice-chairman Guo Xiren.[32]
Province | Voters | % of pop. | Seats | Assembly chairman |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fengtian | 52,679 | 0.43% | 50 | Wu Jinglian |
Zhili | 162,585 | 0.62% | 140 | Yan Fengge |
Jiangxi[c] | 120,000 | ? | 93 | Xie Yuanhan |
Hubei | 113,233 | 0.38% | 80 | Tang Hualong |
Henan[c] | 90,527 | ? | 96 | Du Yan |
Gansu | 9,249 | 0.19% | 43 | Zhang Linyan |
Guangxi | 40,284 | 0.50% | 57 | Chen Shuxun |
Jilin | 15,362 | 0.27% | 30 | Qingkang |
Jiangsu | 162,472 | 0.50% | 121 | Chang Jian |
Zhejiang | 90,275 | 0.42% | 114 | Chen Fuchen |
Hunan | 100,487 | 0.36% | 82 | Tan Yankai |
Shanxi | 53,669 | 0.43% | 86 | Liang Shanji |
Sichuan | 191,500 | 0.39% | 105 | Pu Dianjun |
Yunnan[c] | 47,000 | ? | 68 | Zhang Weicong |
Heilongjiang | 4,652 | 0.23% | 30 | Wang Heming |
Anhui | 77,902 | 0.48% | 83 | Fang Lizhong |
Fujian | 50,034 | 0.39% | 72 | Gao Dengli |
Shandong | 119,549 | 0.38% | 100 | Yang Yusi |
Shaanxi | 29,055 | 0.29% | 63 | Wang Hengjin |
Guangdong | 141,558 | 0.44% | 91 | Yi Xueqing |
Guizhou | 42,526 | 0.42% | 39 | Yo Jiazao |
Aftermath
[edit]The provincial assemblies convened on 14 October 1909.[38] Contemporary political and press responses were favorable to the new assemblies; the conservative Viceroy of Liangguang, Zhang Renjun, was initially opposed to the creation of the local assemblies, but described their membership as well-spoken and knowledgeable about the problems facing the country. A North China Herald account described the members of the Shanxi provincial assembly as peaceful and intelligent.[39]
The assemblies' powers were primarily consultative. The provincial governors[d] held veto power over the assemblies, almost immediately leading to political conflict between the two. Despite this, the assemblies persistently agitated for political reform and the creation of a national parliament. Within the first year of their operation, they passed a large volume of bills, proposals, and petitions, generally relating to economic development.[41][42][43] In 1910, the provincial assemblies elected half of the members of the National Assembly, similarly an advisory council, with the other half of the assembly appointed by the imperial court.[44]
Before another set of provincial elections could be held, the Wuchang Uprising led to an anti-Qing revolutionary movement spreading across much of China. The imperial government responded with the Shijiu xintiao, a further series of political reforms with some inspiration from the British constitutional system; this did little to curb unrest, and even many constitutionalists joined the revolutionaries. Yuan Shikai, the leader of the Qing armies, began to collaborate with the revolutionaries; the Republic of China was declared on 1 January 1912, and the emperor was soon forced to abdicate. The new republic created its own national and provincial assemblies. New provincial assembly elections were held in 1912, similarly plagued by corruption. Chung Po-yee, a member of both the 1909 and 1912 assemblies, compared the 1909 elections to the first Republican elections, due to candidates who were "gentlemanly, modest, and agreeable".[45][42] The new provincial assemblies were dismantled under Yuan Shikai's regime and dissolved by the Beiyang government. Further provincial elections, fraudulently controlled by the Anfu Club, were held in 1918.[46]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ While generally translated "provincial assembly" the name ziyiju carries the connotation of a temporary consultative council rather than provincial legislatures (Chinese: 省議會; pinyin: Shěng yìhuì). Historian Roger Thompson instead labels them "provincial consultative bureaus".[12]
- ^ Tibet, the Kokonur (modern Qinghai), Inner and Outer Mongolia were administered under the Lifan Bu (formerly the Lifan Yuan).[23]
- ^ a b c Jiangxi, Henan, and Yunnan figures are estimates by Min Tu-ki[37]
- ^ Governors (巡撫; xúnfǔ) were appointed by the emperor. They were under the jurisdiction of the imperially-appointed viceroy or governor-general (總督; zǒngdū), who oversaw one to three governors.[40]
References
[edit]- ^ Hill 2013, pp. 215–216.
- ^ a b c d e Chang 2011, pp. 197–198.
- ^ a b Hill 2013, pp. 216–218.
- ^ Xiao-Planes 2009, pp. 39–40.
- ^ Min 1989, p. 141.
- ^ Ichiko 1980, pp. 389–395.
- ^ Chang 1968, pp. 143–145.
- ^ Min 1989, pp. 138–139.
- ^ Min 1989, pp. 148–149.
- ^ Ichiko 1980, pp. 396–397.
- ^ Thompson 1995, pp. 37–39.
- ^ a b Thompson 1985, p. 293.
- ^ Min 1989, pp. 150–153.
- ^ Ichiko 1980, p. 398.
- ^ Min 1989, p. 154.
- ^ a b c Chang 1968, pp. 146–147.
- ^ a b Hill 2019, p. 76.
- ^ a b Hill 2019, p. 85.
- ^ Xiao-Planes 2012, p. 244.
- ^ Chang 1984, p. 6.
- ^ a b Min 1989, pp. 155–156.
- ^ Chang 1955, pp. 137–141.
- ^ Weiers 2016, pp. 73–81.
- ^ Min 1989, pp. 156–157.
- ^ Hill 2019, pp. 96–99.
- ^ Chang 1968, pp. 147–148.
- ^ Hill 2019, pp. 85–86.
- ^ a b Cameron 1963, p. 122.
- ^ a b Min 1989, p. 158.
- ^ Chang 1984, p. 10.
- ^ Min 1989, p. 157.
- ^ a b Chang 1968, pp. 149–155.
- ^ Cameron 1963, p. 123.
- ^ Chang 1984, p. 17.
- ^ Chang 1984, pp. 18–19.
- ^ Chang 1968, pp. 150, 155.
- ^ a b Min 1989, p. 178.
- ^ Min 1989, p. 137.
- ^ Chang 1984, p. 20.
- ^ Qu 1962, p. 6.
- ^ Chang 1984, pp. 21–23.
- ^ a b Xiao-Planes 2009, pp. 40–41.
- ^ Ichiko 1980, p. 400.
- ^ Bartlett 2009, p. 132.
- ^ Chang 1984, pp. 10, 27.
- ^ Chang 1984, pp. 4, 26.
Bibliography
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- Cameron, Meribeth E. (1963) [1931]. The Reform Movement in China, 1898–1912. New York: Octagon Books. ISBN 9780404509590.
- Chang, Chung-li (1955). The Chinese Gentry: Studies on Their Role in Nineteenth-Century Chinese Society. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 9781258044374.
- Chang, David Cheng (2011). "Democracy Is in Its Details: The 1909 Provincial Assembly Elections and the Print Media". In Cochran, Sherman; Pickowicz, Paul G. (eds.). China on the Margins. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 195–220. doi:10.1515/9781942242468. ISBN 9781942242468.
- Chang, P'eng Yuan (1968). "The Constitutionalists". In Wright, Mary Clabaugh (ed.). China in Revolution: The First Phase, 1900-1913. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300014600.
- Chang, P'eng-Yuan (1984). "Provincial Assemblies: The Emergence of Political Participation, 1909–1914". Chinese Studies in History. 17 (3): 3–28. doi:10.2753/CSH0009-463317033.
- Hill, Joshua (2013). "Seeking Talent at the Voting Booth: Elections and the Problem of Campaigning in the Late Qing and Early Republic". Twentieth-Century China. 38 (3): 213–229. doi:10.1353/tcc.2013.0042.
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