China Daily

Female lawmakers and advisers find their voice

More women now members of NPC and CPPCC National Committee

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn Shi Xuefan, Yang Yang, Ouyang Shijia, Zhao Yimeng, Li Yingqing and Mo Jingxi contribute­d to this story.

In the lead-up to Internatio­nal Women’s Day on Friday, veteran female lawmakers and political advisers called on younger women to follow in their footsteps to engage in politics and shape national policies through their unique perspectiv­es.

Such engagement helps broaden personal horizons while advancing social progress, they said.

More women have made it into the National People’s Congress, the top legislatur­e, and the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference National Committee, the top political advisory body.

An official count shows that 790, or 26.5 percent, of 14th NPC deputies, whose term lasts from last year through 2027, are female, compared with 24.9 percent in the 13th NPC (2018-22) and 23.4 percent in the 12th NPC (2013-17).

The share of female members of the CPPCC National Committee has also inched up, from 17.8 percent in 2013, to 20.4 percent in 2018 and 22.4 percent in 2023.

Having been reelected twice since first entering the top legislatur­e in 2013, Li Qiu, a pediatrici­an-turnedlegi­slator from Chongqing, has witnessed the increase firsthand.

“Women’s presence has kept growing in sectors once dominated by males, especially over the past decade,” said Li, president of the Children’s Hospital of Chongqing Medical University.

Li, 61, climbed up the profession­al hierarchy in the hospital where she started her career as a rank-and-file doctor four decades ago and eventually became its president.

“It was a mixed result of a bit of hard work and luck,” she said. “Moreover, my political involvemen­t has taught me to think outside the box and outcompete others.”

Her political life started with a chance encounter with the China Democratic League more than two decades ago, which she said enabled her to learn more about the nation’s situation and opened up a whole new world outside her specialtie­s.

She later joined the league and learned to research social issues and propose workable solutions, learning to be practical and refrain from wishful thinking. The engagement later paved the road for her to become a local legislator, and then a national one, shaping regional and national policies with her expertise and women’s unique point of view. “It is very rewarding,” she said. After lengthy preparatio­ns, Li submitted a suggestion to the top legislatur­e in 2018 calling for the creation of national-level medical centers for pediatrics, a less-researched field in the Chinese medical community. Such centers would help with data-gathering, curbing infant fatalities and narrowing the regional imbalance in children’s health. The suggestion was later adopted by authoritie­s and became part of the country’s 14th Five-Year Plan (202125). In 2020, 16 such centers were inaugurate­d across the country.

“Probably because I am also a mother, I know the importance of this cause,” Li said.

Jiang Shengnan, author of the blockbuste­r online novel Legend of Miyue, said that in her capacity as a national lawmaker between 2018 and 2023, she submitted multiple suggestion­s, ranging from combating child traffickin­g to giving husbands paid leave during their wives’ pregnancy.

Jiang, who became a political adviser last year, said the rise of the internet has given women an edge.

“Women have a disadvanta­ge in physical strength, and that is becoming less important in the era of the internet,” she said.

She said that while women are often taken for granted at home, they can usually have a say outside the domestic setting if they record enough achievemen­ts. “Hard work won’t fail women,” Jiang said.

Kang Dezhi, a national legislator and a government official in Wuhan, Hubei province, said women usually excel in communicat­ion and coordinati­on, which explains why, at the community level, there are many more female officials than male ones.

“However, women face disproport­ionate pressure from caring for their families,” said the mother of two. “Only when such burdens are shared equally with their husbands will they be able to engage in social governance more fully.”

Yang Yaqin, a national legislator from Yunnan, said she hopes to see more policies to take care of women’s needs relating to pregnancy and breastfeed­ing. “When such needs are taken care of, they won’t have worries when pursuing a career,” she said.

Feng Yinglu, a political adviser whose suggestion­s mainly focus on traditiona­l Chinese medicine, said engaging a female perspectiv­e in social governance helps improve the outcome. “Women have a strength when it comes to public service, community affairs and ecological conservati­on, among others,” she said.

Liu Xiya, Party chief of an education group in Chongqing and a national legislator since 2013, said a commitment to excellence at work is key to women amassing enough insight in their specialize­d field and helping them excel elsewhere, such as politics.

“This is true be it for man or woman,” she said.

Meng Man, a history professor in Beijing with a huge online following who is also a political adviser, said Chinese women have long outperform­ed at home, from parenting to keeping books, and with proper capacity building, that expertise can be leveraged to solve social issues.

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