1st Central Committee of the Workers' Party of North Korea

The 1st Central Committee of the Workers' Party of North Korea (WPNK) (Korean1차 북조선로동당중앙위원회) was elected by the 1st Congress on 30 August 1946 through the merger of the Communist Party of North Korea and the New People's Party of Korea,[1] and remained in session until the election of the 2nd Central Committee on 30 March 1948.[2] In between party congresses and specially convened conferences the Central Committee is the highest decision-making institution in the party and North Korea.[3] The 1st Central Committee was not a permanent institution and delegated day-to-day work to elected central guidance bodies, such as the Political Committee, the Standing Committee and the Organisation Committee (membership not disclosed).[4][5] It convened meetings, known as Plenary Sessions of the 1st Central Committee, to discuss major policies.[6] A plenary session could be attended by non-members.[6] These meetings are known as Enlarged Plenary Sessions.[6] The party rules approved at the 1st Congress stipulated that the Central Committee needed to convene for a plenary session every third month.[7] In total, the 1st Central Committee convened for twelve plenary sessions, of which eight were convened in 1947.[8]

1st Central Committee
← CPNK
2nd →
30 August 1946 – 30 March 1948
(1 year, 213 days)
Overview
TypeCentral Committee of the Workers' Party of North Korea
Election1st Congress (1946)
Leadership
ChairmanKim Tu-bong
Vice ChairmenKim Il Sung
Chu Yong-ha
Ho Ka-i
Political Committee5 members
Standing Committee13 members
Members
Total43

Forty-three members were elected to the 1st Central Committee, of which thirty-one were re-elected at the 2nd Congress.[9] Its members convened for the 1st Plenary Session on 31 August 1946 and elected the 1st Organisation Committee, 1st Standing Committee and the 1st Political Committee, and voted in Kim Tu-bong as the WPNK Chairman and Kim Il Sung and Chu Yong-ha were elected vice chairmen.[10] Despite their formal roles, real powers remained in Kim Il Sung's hands, and Kim Tu-bong played a more ceremonial role due to his unwillingness to partake in the day-to-day management of party affairs.[10] In the 1st Plenary Session's aftermath, the party began establishing state structures known as provisional people's committees throughout the country, and in 1947 national elections to the People's Assembly was organised.[11] At its first plenary session, the assembly elected a Presidium and designated Kim Tu-bong as its chairman and appointed the People's Committee (the government) and elected Kim Il Sung as its chairman.[12] Of twenty-two government members, sixteen were members of the WPNK.[12]

A feature of early North Korean politics was its factionalism.[13] Four loosely defined factions had taken shape by this time; Kim Il Sung's partisans, domestic communists, the Yanan group and the Soviet Koreans.[note 1][13] The partisans, comprising soldiers who had fought Japanese rule with Kim Il Sung, lacked both theoretical and organisational experience to take leading party offices.[13] They were therefore poorly represented in the 1st Central Committee.[13] The domestic faction, composed of indigenous communists and leading members of the Workers' Party of South Korea, were underrepresented due to their underground activities in South Korea.[13] Korean revolutionaries based in China during Japanese rule, known as the Yanan faction, had the most representation on the committee.[13] The Soviet Koreans, composed of Koreans who were either Soviet-born or lived there during Japanese rule, also had significant representation.[13] The conflict between these factions would intensify over the years, with Soviet Korean Yu Song-gol stating that he "as early as 1947 ... overheard how former partisans not only mentioned the [Yanans] and 'Soviets' with a great deal of animosity but also expressed the desire to be rid of them in due course."[15] These factional conflicts were rarely based on policy differences but rather on personal interests and the struggle for power.[16] Scholar Andrey Lankov notes that "at least [twenty-eight] members" of the 1st Central Committee "became victims of Kim Il-sung's purges. The real number was probably even higher since, in many cases, purges were not made public."[13]

A conflict between Kim Il Sung's partisan faction and Pak Hon-yong's domestic faction had been brewing since the North Korean Branch Bureau's formation in October 1945.[16] The leading domestic communist in the North, O Ki-sop, was accused of making "leftist and rightist errors" at the 3rd Enlarged Plenary Session.[17] Vice Chairman Chu Yong-ha further elaborated on the criticism and claimed that "O had attempted to apply labour union principles under capitalism to the socialist setting of North Korea, thereby deliberately inciting unthinking workers."[17] O Ki-sop defended himself by citing the works of Vladimir Lenin and claimed that "[if I am such] a pain in the neck then why not just pin the label of Trotskyite on [me]?"[18] While Pak Il-u supposedly rose in his defence and called for a committee to study the Lenin work in question, Kim Il Sung stated that no such committee was necessary due to O Ki-sop's past mistakes.[18] The criticism of O Ki-sop and the attacks on the indigenous North Korean communist movement that had remained active in Korea during Japanese colonialism were supported by the partisans, Soviet Koreans and the Yanans.[18]

Plenary sessions

Plenary sessions of the 1st Central Committee
[19]
PlenumDateLengthAgenda
1st Plenary Session31 August 19461 day
  1. Elections of the officers and apparatus heads of the 1st Central Committee.
2nd Enlarged Plenary Session25 September 19461 day
  1. Report by Kim Il Sung on the election to the People's Committee.
3rd Enlarged Plenary Session25 November 19461 day
  1. Debate on the party's present tasks.
  2. Debate on the elections held on 3 November.
  3. Concerning the strengthening of the party's organisation and political educational projects.
4th Enlarged Plenary Session2 February 19471 day
  1. Debate on the election of the people's committees at the myon and ri administrative levels.
5th Plenary SessionNot made publicNot made publicNot made public
6th Enlarged Plenary Session15 March 19471 day
  1. Report by Kim Il Sung on party work to realise economic reconstruction and development.
  2. Debate on the party's duty to strengthen the people's rights.
  3. Report concerning the grave errors of some party organisations in some party projects.
7th Enlarged Plenary Session16 June 19471 day
  1. Debate on participating in and cooperating with the US–Soviet Joint Commission on Korea on establishing an interim Korean government.
  2. Election of a representative to the US–Soviet Joint Commission.
    1. Kim Il Sung was elected the Representative to the US–Soviet Joint Commission
  3. Election of an ad hoc committee to respond to the US–Soviet Joint Commission's questionnaires.
8th Plenary Session1 July 19471 day
  1. Debate on the US–Soviet Joint Commission on Korea resolutions.
  2. Approving the reply on Article 5 and Article 6 in the "Organizations of the Interim Government" of the US–Soviet Joint Commission.
9th Plenary SessionNot made publicNot made publicNot made public
10th Plenary Session13 September 19471 day
  1. Discussion on the role of the party leadership in projects of the mass organisations.
11th Plenary Session23 December 19471 day
  1. On projects concerning every party leading organ.
  2. Discussion on the gathering of the 2nd Congress.
  3. Election of a bylaw draft committee to amend the party platform and rules.
  4. Concerning the policy of realising the first and fourth periods of the 1948 economic plan.
  5. Concerning organisational problems.
12th Plenary Session9 February 19481 day
  1. Report by Kim Il Sung on every party organisation's responsibility to realise the 1948 economic plan.
  2. Debate on the draft of the interim constitution of Korea.
  3. Debate on postponing the 2nd Congress.

Members

Members of the 1st Central Committee
[20][21][22][23][24][25]
RankNameKorean2nd CCInner-compositionBackground
1st POC1st STC
1Kim Tu-bong김두봉ReelectedMemberMemberYanan
2Kim Il Sung김일성ReelectedMemberMemberPartisan
3Chu Yong-ha주영하ReelectedMemberMemberDomestic
4Choe Chang-ik최창익ReelectedMemberMemberYanan
5Ho Ka-i허가이ReelectedMemberMemberSoviet
6Kim Chang-man김창만NotMemberYanan
7Ho Jong-suk허정숙ReelectedYanan
8Kim Yong-tae김용태NotDomestic
9Pak Chang-sik박창식ReelectedMemberSoviet
10Pak Chong-ae박정애ReelectedMemberDomestic
11Kim Chaek김책ReelectedMemberPartisan
12Mu Chuong무정ReelectedYanan
13Yi Chun-am이춘암NotYanan
14An Kil안길DiedPartisan
15Kim Ye-pil김예필NotYanan
16Kim Il김일ReelectedMemberPartisan
17Pak Hyo-sam박효삼ReelectedMemberYanan
18Chang Sun-myong장선명ReelectedSoviet
19Kim Yol김열ReelectedSoviet
20Kim Chae-uk김채욱ReelectedMemberSoviet
21Yun Kong-hum윤공흠NotYan'an
22Han Il-mu한일무ReelectedSoviet
23Tae Song-su태성수ReelectedSoviet
24Han Sol-ya한설야ReelectedSoviet
25Choe Kyong-dok최경덕ReelectedDomestic
26Kang Chin-gon강진곤ReelectedDomestic
27Chang Si-u장시우ReelectedDomestic
28Chong Tu-hyon정두현ReelectedDomestic
29Yim To-jun임도준Not
30Yim Hae임해ReelectedPartisan
31O Ki-sop오기섭ReelectedDomestic
32Kim Uk-chin김욱진NotDomestic
33Yi Sun-gun이순금ReelectedDomestic
34Kim Kyo-yong김교용ReelectedPartisan
35Myong Hi-jo명희조NotYanan
36Han Pin한빈NotYanan
37Yi Chong-ik이종익Reelected
38Chon Song-hwa전송화NotSoviet
39Kim Wol-song김월송NotDomestic
40Chang Chong-sik장종식NotDomestic
41Kim Min-san김민산Reelected
42Pak Hun-il박헌일ReelectedYanan
43Pak Il-u박일우ReelectedMemberYanan

Notes

References

Citations

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