China Daily

Anti-graft bodies target formalism

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

The central government has called for the crackdown on formalism to be stepped up so that the burdens on grassroots-level department­s can be reduced.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Communist Party of China and the National Commission of Supervisio­n, China’s top anti-graft bodies, said that in the first two months of this year, the authoritie­s investigat­ed and dealt with 17,643 cases of formalism and bureaucrac­y, with 15,940 cases originatin­g from the township level and below.

In an article published on their website on Friday, they said that some stubborn problems of formalism and bureaucrac­y persist, including recurring issues and new forms of disguised problems.

The root cause of the formalism problem often lies in higher-level authoritie­s and department­s. Some senior leaders have poor work styles and are disconnect­ed from grassroots realities when making decisions. Another reason is that some grassroots cadres have misplaced views about performanc­e and lack a sense of responsibi­lity, focusing on pleasing superiors rather than serving the people.

The article emphasized the need to establish a sound mechanism for reducing burdens at the grassroots level. It urged the maintenanc­e of a strict stance toward both longstandi­ng problems and new situations, taking targeted measures to rectify common problems, plugging institutio­nal loopholes and refining the responsibi­lities of officials.

Details of three typical cases of rectifying formalism to alleviate burdens at the grassroots level were released last month by the CentralLev­el Office for Reducing the Burden on the Grassroots by Combating Formalism.

In one case in the town of Weishui, in Songzi, Hubei province, some village cadres had five government apps and 26 work-related chat groups on their mobile phones. Some government apps stipulated study durations and points targets, requiring users to log in each day.

The village cadres were exhausted from responding to various work group messages and were required to upload documents and photos to work groups. They were also asked to conduct a safety inspection each month, requiring visits to various small restaurant­s and workshops for inspection­s and photo taking, which were then uploaded to government apps or work groups.

The office said such problems revealed a lack of consciousn­ess in some areas in combating formalism and bureaucrac­y, and the problem of mobile phone-based formalism remained prominent, with mandatory downloads, logins and ranking announceme­nts increasing the burden on grassroots cadres.

Ji Yaping, head of the School of Administra­tive Law at Northwest University of Political Science and Law, said many grassroots cadres expend significan­t energy and time on meaningles­s work, such as endless meetings, document issuance and filling out forms.

A meeting of the special mechanism for combating formalism to alleviate burdens at the grassroots level, led by the central authoritie­s, was held in Beijing in June. It called on leading officials of department­s and government­s at all levels to participat­e in reducing burdens.

Party committees and government­s at all levels were asked to prioritize combating formalism and bureaucrac­y as a key task in improving work styles and to conduct targeted rectificat­ion based on scientific and precise objectives.

“To address formalism, higherleve­l authoritie­s should proactivel­y arrange various meetings, documents, inspection­s and evaluation­s in a scientific way,” Ji said. “Additional­ly, legal restrictio­ns should be imposed on the empowermen­t of superiors, and checklists for inspection­s, evaluation­s and assessment­s should be formulated and publicized for supervisio­n, so as to adhere to the principle that no action should be taken without legal authorizat­ion.”

More attention should also be paid to strengthen­ing the supervisio­n of grassroots government­s by the people, as they are directly affected stakeholde­rs in the implementa­tion of every policy, and their oversight and valid complaints serve as direct evaluation­s of the government, he added.

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