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Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC) is the highest organ between two congresses.

History

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The Central Committee was established on 3 October 1965 when the United Party of the Cuban Socialist Revolution was transformed into the present-day Communist Party of Cuba.[1] Between Central Committee plenary sessions the Politburo and the Secretariat meet in its place.[1] It has been led since its establishment in 1965 by the First and Second Secretary of the Central Committee.[1]

Alternate membership of the Central Committee was abolished at the 4th Party Congress, held on 10–14 October 1991, with the intention of streamlining the party's decision-making process.[2]

Terms

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Term Members Period Duration
Male Female Reelected Start End
Provisional 95 5 87 3 October 1965 17 December 1975 10 years, 75 days
1st 117 9 95 22 December 1975 17 December 1980 4 years, 361 days
2nd ? ? ? 20 December 1980 4 February 1986 5 years, 46 days
3rd 225 ? 99 7 February 1986 10 October 1991 5 years, 245 days
4th 250 ? ? 14 October 1991 8 October 1997 5 years, 354 days
5th 130 20 45 8 October 1997 16 April 2011 13 years, 190 days
6th 71 44 76 19 April 2011 16 April 2016 4 years, 363 days
7th 85 57 58 19 April 2016 16 April 2021 4 years, 362 days
8th 62 53 19 April 2021 Incumbent 3 years, 124 days

See also

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References

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Specific

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  1. ^ a b c Bethell 1993, p. 129.
  2. ^ Kapcia 1992, p. 182.

Bibliography

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Articles and journals:

  • Kapcia, Antoni (1992). "The fourth congress of the Cuban Communist Party: Time for a change?". Journal of Communist Studies. 8 (1). University of California Press: 180–7. doi:10.1080/13523279208415136.

Books: