2nd Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea

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2nd Central Committee
← 1st
3rd →
30 March 1948 – 29 April 1956
(8 years, 30 days)
Overview
Decision making
body
Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
Election2nd Congress
Members98
Candidate members20
Officers
ChairmanKim Il-sung (49–56)
Kim Tu-bong
Vice ChairmenKim Il-sung
Chu Yong-ha
First SecretaryHo Ka-i
Second SecretaryYi Sung-yop
Third Secretary
Political Committee14 members
Standing Committee16 members
Inspection Committee8 members
Organisation Committee11 members

The 2nd Central Committee (2nd CC) of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) was elected at the 2nd Congress on 30 March 1948,[1] and remained in session until the election of the 3rd Central Committee on 29 April 1956.[2] In between party congresses and specially convened conferences the Central Committee is the highest decision-making institution in the WPK and North Korea.[3] The 2nd Central Committee was not a permanent institution and delegated day-to-day work to elected bodies, such as the Political Committee, the Standing Committee, the Organisation Committee and the Inspection Committee in this case.[4] It convened meetings, known as "Plenary Session of the [term] Central Committee", to discuss major policies.[5] Only full members had the right to vote, but if a full member could not attend a plenary session, the person's spot was taken over by an alternate.[5] Plenary session could also be attended by non-members, such meetings are known as "Enlarged Plenary Session", to participate in the committee's discussions.[5] During its tenure it held five plenary sessions, one enlarged session, seven joint plenary sessions and four stand-alone plenums.[6]

A feature of North Korean politics was its factionalism.[7] Four loosely defined factions were struggling for dominance; Kim Il-sung's partisans, domestic communists, the Yanan group and the Soviet Koreans.[note 1][7] The 2nd CC, which consisted of 67 members and 20 alternate members, was divided along factional lines.[9] Of the 67 members, 30 had served in the 1st Central Committee.[10] Among those not reelected were and from the domestic faction.[10] The position of the partisan faction was strengthened, with Kang Kon, Kim Kwang-hyop, and Pak Kum-chol being elected to the 2nd Central Committee.[10] Despite this, the domestic faction had the most representation on the 2nd CC.[10] Further the 2nd CC reelected Yanan communist Kim Tu-bong as Chairman of the Central Committee while partisan Kim Il-sung and Chu Yong-ha from the domestic group were elected to the office of Vice Chairman.[10] All the members of the 1st Political Committee were re-elected, while two new were added; Kim Chaek and Pak Il-u.[10] Upon the merger of the Workers' Party of North Korea and the Workers' Party of South Korea (WPSK) on 24 June 1949, the 2nd Central Committee merged with the 1st WPSK Central Committee and gained 31 new members.[11] The newly-expanded 2nd CC elected Kim Il-sung as Chairman and domestic communist Pak Hon-yong and Soviet Korean Ho Ka-i as vice chairmen.[12] Also, Ho Ka-i with domestic communists (and former WPSK members) Yi Sung-yop and were elected First, Second and Third Secretary respectively in charge of administrative affairs.[12] 36 individuals were re-elected to the 3rd Central Committee, of these 29 were original members of the WPNK's 2nd CC.[12]

The first moves to purge the domestic faction from WPK political life began at the 5th Joint Plenary Session, held 15–18 December 1952.[13] In his report to the plenum Kim Il-sung talked about defects in party work and accused certain people, without mentioning names, of lacking proper "Party character", forsaking the masses, not performing duties assigned to them and not criticising party policy through proper party channels.[13] Shortly after the plenary session was arrested for writing for anti-communist thinking for writing the following lines in a poem; "Forests were put to the fire; houses were burned. If Stalin comes to Korea, there is not a house to put him up for the night."[13] Continuing up to December 1952 several other figures were arrested, such as , , and .[13] Several others were secretly arrested as the purge was carried outside the public eye.[13] On 15 February 1953 an editorial in Rodong Sinmun stated that, in line with the 5th Joint Plenary Session, certain factionalists had become a "target of our hatred".[14] Mentioned by name was Yim Hwa, Chu Yong-ha, and , but the editorial noted that there were "others" as well.[14] They were charged with "not trusting the Party, and with slandering Party Policy and Party leadership."[14] The editorial noted that the Party had been tolerant of their behaviour, but stated that when given the chance to apologise the accused did not admit their mistakes and/or gave half-hearted apologies.[15] Chu Yong-ha, instead of apologising for his supposed misdeeds, openly criticised the leadership of the WPK.[15] While no public criticism was aired at Pak Hon-yong at the time, he was not heard, seen in public or reported on since February 1953.[16]

Around the same time, the Kim Il-sung group moved against WPK First Secretary Ho Ka-i, who under pressure either committed suicide or was murdered on 2 July 1953.[16] The suicide was announced at the 6th Joint Plenary Session, held on 4–6 August 1953, as well as the expulsion from the party of Pak Hon-yong and other leading WPSK officials.[16] During the plenum, on 3–6 August, a trial conducted by the Military Tribunal Department of the Supreme Court involving twelve defendants was organised.[note 2][17] The defendants were accused of spying for the United States Government and infiltrating the North Korean Government and the WPK.[18] Pak Hon-yong, as the ringleader of the alleged conspiracy, was accused of seeking to overthrow the North Korean government and thethe WPK leadership, and seeking to restore capitalism.[19] Pak Hon-yong was not put on trial before 15 December 1955, in which he was trialled by a special session of the Supreme Court in which the judges were leading politicians of the WPK.[20] He was accused of becoming "a traitor of the revolution" in 1939 and of "disguising himself as a patriot", and was executed for his supposed crimes on 18 December 1955.[21] This supposed conspiracy helped explain North Korea's defeat in the Korean War, and further rationalise Kim Il-sung's growing dominance over the WPK and state machinery.[22]

Plenary sessions[]

Plenum Start–end Length Agenda
1st Plenary Session 31 March 1948 1 day
1 item.
  • Elections of the Officers of the 2nd Central Committee.
2nd Plenary Session 12 July 1948 1 day
2 items.
3rd Plenary Session 24–25 September 1948 2 days
3 items.
  • On party organisational tasks and the Supreme People's Assembly's election results.
  • Debate on the collection of textile tax and increased agricultural production of grains in 1949.
  • Concerning organisational matters:
    • Election of Vice Chairman of the Party;
    • Elections to the Standing Committee;
    • Decision on establishing the Organisational Committee of the 2nd Central Committee;
      • Election of members to the Organisational Committee;
    • Election of the Chairman of the 2nd Auditing and 2nd Inspection commissions;
    • General debate on the farewell ceremony for Soviet forces.
4th Plenary Session 9–14 December 1948 5 days Not made public.
5th Plenary Session 12–13 February 1949 2 days
4 items.
  • On the strengthening of the party's leadership. Summation of the work of lower-level party organisations in the last nine months.
  • Debate on the party's tasks to realise economic reconstruction in the period 1949–50.
  • Debate on the party organisation report in the upcoming elections to the people's committees of provinces, cities, counties and districts.
  • Decision on establishing the Chagang Provincial Committee and lower-level organisations of the party in connection with the establishment of Chagang Province and its administrative structures.
6th Enlarged Plenary Session 11 June 1949 1 day
2 items.
1st Joint Plenary Session 24 June 1949 1 day
3 items.
  • Decision on forming the Workers' Party of Korea.
  • Election of Officers of the 2nd Central Committee.
  • Restructuring of the committees subordinate to the Central Committee.
2nd Joint Plenary Session 15–18 December 1949 3 days
3 items.
  • Concerning the party's revised policy in the industrial sector in connection with the Two-Year People's Economic Plan.
  • Report by Pak Hon-yong on the need to strengthen party ideological education of members.
  • Discussion on organisational problems.
    • Kim Il-sung hold a speech named "".
3rd Joint Plenary Session 21–23 December 1950 3 days
3 items.
  • Report by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • Problems arising from the unification of the workers' organisations of North and South Korea.
  • Debate on organisational problems.
4th Joint Plenary Session 1–4 November 1951 4 days
2 items.
  • Report by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • On organisational problems:
  • The meeting concluded with Kim Il-sung's speech "".
5th Joint Plenary Session 15–18 December 1952 4 days
2 items.
  • Report by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • Report by Pak Chong-ae, known as "".
6th Joint Plenary Session 4–6 August 1953 3 days
3 items.
  • Report by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • Report by Pak Chong-ae on recent anti-party and anti-state activities of Yi Sung-yop, , Pak Sung-won, , Yi Kang-guk "and others", "and the incident of Ho Ka-i, who cowardly committed suicide after committing anti-people and anti-party activities".
  • On organisational problems:
    • The following were expelled from the 2nd Central Committee: Chu Yong-ha, , Pak Hon-yong, , , and . Alternate member is expelled as well;
    • The following were expelled from the 2nd Central Committee for "not being faithful and sacrificial in their service to the party and state" during the war: , , and ;
    • The following were elected to the 2nd Central Committee: , , , and ;
    • The abolition of the Organisational Committee and the election of a new Standing Committee composed of: Kim Il-sung, Kim Tu-bong, Pak Chong-ae, , Choe Won-taek, Choe Chang-ik, , , Kang Mun-sok, , Kim Kwang-hyop, Pak Kum-chol and Nam Il;
    • The election of the following to the Political Committee: Kim Il-sung, Kim Tu-bong, Pak Chong-ae, Pak Chang-ok and Kim Il;
    • , the Chairman of the 2nd Inspection Commission, and , the Vice Chairman of the 2nd Inspection Commission, are relieved of their duties and replaced by as new Chairman.
    • Abolition of the Central Committee secretary system, and the election of Pak Chong-ae, Pak Chang-ok and Kim Il to the office of Vice Chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea;
    • Election of the following members to the Committee on Revision of Party Rules: Kim Il-sung, Pak Chong-ae, Pak Chang-ok, Kim Il, Pak Yong-bin, Yi Ki-sok, Kim Kwang-hyop, , Han Sol-ya, Kang Mun-sok, Hwang Tae-song, , , and Pak Kum-chol;
    • The following were elected to positions within the Central Committee apparatus: as the Chairman of Propaganda and Agitation Section, as the Chairman of Society Section and as the Chairman of the Social Science Section.
7th Joint Plenary Session 21–23 March 1954 3 days
2 items.
  • Report by Kim Il, known as "".
  • Report by Pak Chong-ae, known as "".
March Plenary Session 21–23 March 1954 3 days
2 items.
  • Report by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • Report by Kim Il-sung concerning organisational problems:
    • Pak Yong-bin and Pak Kum-chol are elected to the office of Vice Chairman of the WPK Central Committee while Pak Chang-ok and Kim Il are relieved of their position as WPK vice chairmen.
November Plenary Session 1–3 April 1955 3 days
6 items.
  • Speech by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • Report by Kim Il, known as "".
  • General Report on the work of every party organisation in the election.
  • The restructuring off, and the election of twenty-five members to the Committee on Drafting the Party Platform.
  • Concerning party organisational problems.
  • Speech by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
April Plenary Session 1–4 December 1955 4 days
5 items.
  • Report by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • Report by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
  • Report by Pak Chang-ok, known as "".
  • Debate on the problems of party discipline.
  • Concluding remarks by Kim Il-sung, known as "".
December Plenary Session 2–3 December 1955 2 days
3 items.
  • Concerning the decisions made at the November Plenary Session on the development of agriculture.
  • Concerning the convocation of the 3rd Party Congress
    • Decision on holding the congress in April 1956;
    • Decision on the Agenda of the 3rd Party Congress:
      1. Report on the work of the 2nd Central Committee, presented by Kim Il-sung;
      2. Report on the work of the 2nd Central Auditing Commission, presented by ;
      3. Report on the work of the Bylaw Revision Committee, presented by Pak Chong-ae;
      4. Election of the 3rd Central Committee and the 3rd Central Auditing Commission
  • Debate on the party's organisational problems.
References:
[6]

Members[]

1st Plenary Session (1946–49)[]

Full[]

Rank Name
Hangul
Level of government
(Offices held)
1st CC 3rd CC Inner-composition Background
2nd POC 2nd STC 2nd ORG 2nd INS
1 Kim Tu-bong Old Reelected Chairman Chairman
Yanan
2 Kim Il-sung Old Reelected Member Member Member
Partisan
3 Ho Ka-i Old Demoted Member Member Member
Soviet
4 Chu Yong-ha
Central
  • (September – October 1948)
Old Expelled Member Member
Domestic
5 Kim Chaek
Central
Old Demoted Member Member
Partisan
6 Choe Chang-ik Old Reelected Member Member
Yanan
7 Pak Il-u
Central
Old Demoted Member Member
Yanan
8 Pak Chong-ae
Central
Old Reelected
Member Member
Domestic
9
Old Demoted
Partisan
10
Central
  • (1955–56)
  • Chairman of the
New Reelected
Member
Partisan
11 Pak Chang-ok
New Reelected
Member
Soviet
12 Kim Il
Central
  • (1954–56)
Old Reelected
Member
Partisan
13
Old Demoted
Member
Soviet
14
New Reelected
Domestic
15
Old Demoted
Member Member
Soviet
16
Central
Old Demoted
Domestic
17
Old Demoted
Yanan
18
Old Demoted
19
New Reelected
Member
Soviet
20
Central
Old Reelected
Domestic
21
Old Reelected
Soviet
22
Old Reelected
Yanan
23
New Demoted
Partisan
24 Han Sol-ya
Old Reelected
Domestic
25
New Demoted
Soviet
26 Kang Kon
New Demoted
Partisan
27
New Demoted
Soviet
28
Central
New Demoted
Member
Soviet
29 Ho Chong-suk
Central
New Reelected
Yanan
30
New Demoted
Domestic
31
Old Demoted
Soviet
32 Old Demoted
Chairman Soviet
33
New Reelected
Domestic
34
New Demoted
Member Domestic
35 Mu Chong
Old Demoted
Yanan
36 Pak Chang-sik
New Demoted
Soviet
37
New Demoted
Domestic
38
Old Demoted
Yanan
39
New Reelected
Domestic
40
Central
Old Expelled
Domestic
41
Old Demoted
Domestic
42
Old Reelected
Domestic
43
Old Demoted
44
New Reelected
Domestic
45
Old Demoted
Domestic
46 Kim Kwang-hyop
New Reelected
Partisan
47
Old Demoted
Member Domestic
48
New Demoted
Member Domestic
49
New Demoted
Soviet
50
Old Reelected
Partisan
51
New Reelected
Member
Domestic
52 Pang Hak-se
New Reelected
Member Soviet
53
New Reelected
Yanan
54 Kim Ung
New Reelected
Soviet
55
New Reelected
Yanan
56
New Demoted
Soviet
57
New Demoted
Member Yanan
58
New Demoted
59
New Reelected
Yanan
60
New Reelected
Partisan
61 Kim Han-jung
New Demoted
Yanan
62
New Demoted
Member Member
Domestic
63
Central
New Reelected
Yanan
64
New Demoted
65
New Reelected
Partisan
66 Pak Kum-chol
New Reelected
Partisan
67
New Demoted
Soviet
References:
[24][25][26][27][28]

Alternates[]

Rank Name
Hangul
1st CC 3rd CC Background
1 New Demoted
2 New Demoted
3 New Demoted
4 New Demoted
5 New Full Yanan
6 New Demoted
7 New Demoted
8 New Full Domestic
9 New Demoted Yanan
10 New Reelected
11 Nam Il New Full
12 New Demoted Soviet
13 New Full
14 New Demoted
15 New Demoted
16 New Demoted
17 New Full Partisan
18 New Reelected
19 New Demoted
20 New Demoted Soviet
References:
[24][25][26][27][28]

1st Joint Plenary Session (1949–56)[]

Name
Hangul
Level of government
(Offices held)
1st CC 3rd CC Inner-composition Background
2nd POC 2nd STC 2nd SEC 2nd ORG 2nd INS
WPSK Expelled
Domestic
New Demoted
Member Yanan
New Demoted
Member Domestic
Central
  • (1949–52)
Old Expelled
Domestic
Central
Old Demoted
Chairman Soviet
Central
  • Minister of Foreign Trade (1953–56)
New Reelected
Soviet
New Expelled
New Reelected
Yanan
New Demoted
Partisan
Choe Chang-ik
Central
Old Reelected
Member
Member
Yanan
Central
Old Demoted
Domestic
Old Demoted
Choe Won-taek
Central
New Reelected
Member
Partisan
Central
  • (1954–55)
  • Chairman of the (1949–54)
New Reelected
Partisan
Central
  • (1951–52 & 54–55)
  • (February – July 1951)
New Reelected
Member
Domestic
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Old Demoted
Partisan
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Chu Yong-ha
Old Expelled
Domestic
Old Reelected
Soviet
Han Sol-ya
Old Reelected
Domestic
Ho Chong-suk
Central
New Reelected
Yanan
Ho Hon
Central
WPSK Died Member
Member
Domestic
Ho Ka-i
Central
Old Died V. Chairman V. Chairman 1. Secretary Member
Soviet
Ho Song-taek
Central
  • (1949–52)
WPSK Reelected
Domestic
Central
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
New Demoted
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Central
Old Reelected
Domestic
Kang Kon
New Demoted
Partisan
Kang Mun-sok
WPSK Demoted
Member
Domestic
Central
New Demoted
Soviet
Old Demoted
Soviet
Kim Chaek
Central
Old Died Member
Member
Partisan
New Demoted
Soviet
New Reelected
Domestic
��
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Kim Han-jung
New Demoted
Yanan
New Reelected
Member
Domestic
Kim Il
Central
Old Reelected V. Chairman V. Chairman
Partisan
Kim Il-sung Old Reelected Chairman Chairman
Member
Partisan
New Demoted
Member Domestic
New Demoted
Kim Kwang-hyop
New Reelected
Member
Partisan
WPSK Expelled
Domestic
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Old Demoted
Partisan
New Reelected
Partisan
Old Demoted
Yanan
WPSK Expelled
Domestic
WPSK Died Member
3. Secretary Member
Domestic
New Reelected
Domestic
WPSK Reelected
Domestic
Central
  • (1955–56)
  • (1951–53)
New Demoted
Member
Soviet
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
New Demoted
Kim Tu-bong Old Reelected Member
Member
Yanan
Kim Ung
New Reelected
Soviet
WPSK Expelled
Domestic
Central
New Reelected
Chairman Domestic
Old Demoted
Member
Soviet
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Kim Yong-jae
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
New Demoted
Soviet
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Central
WPSK Expelled
Domestic
Mu Chong
Old Expelled
Yanan
Nam Il
Central
New Reelected
Member
Soviet
Old Reelected
Domestic
Pak Chang-ok
Central
New Reelected V. Chairman V. Chairman
Soviet
Pak Chong-ae Old Reelected V. Chairman V. Chairman
Domestic
Pak Chang-sik
New Demoted
Soviet
Pak Hon-yong WPSK Expelled V. Chairman V. Chairman
Member
Domestic
Old Reelected
Yanan
Old Demoted
Yanan
Pak Il-u
Central
  • Ministet of Post and Telecommunications (1953–55)
  • (1949–52)
Old Expelled Member
Member
Yanan
Pak Kum-chol
Central
New Reelected V. Chairman V. Chairman
Partisan
New Demoted
New Reelected
Yanan
Pak Mun-gyu
Central
  • Minister of Agriculture (1952–54)
  • (1949–52)
WPSK Reelected
Domestic
Central
New Demoted V. Chairman V. Chairman
Soviet
New Demoted
Domestic
Pang Hak-se
Central
New Reelected
Member Soviet
Old Demoted
WPSK Reelected
Domestic
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Old Demoted
Soviet
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
WPSK Expelled
Domestic
Old Demoted
Member Domestic
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
New Expelled
New Demoted
Domestic
New Demoted
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
Central
WPSK Demoted
V. Chairman Domestic
New Reelected
Yanan
New Demoted
Domestic
New Reelected
��
Partisan
Old Demoted
Domestic
Yi Sung-yop
Central
  • Chairman of the (1952–53)
WPSK Expelled Member
2. Secretary Member
Domestic
New Demoted
Soviet
New Demoted
New Reelected
Yanan
Old Reelected
Partisan
New Demoted
Central
WPSK Demoted
Domestic
New Demoted
References:
[24][25][26][27][28]

Noter[]

  1. ^ While a hallmark of early North Korean politics is factionalism, scholars Scalapino and Lee notes that "To place too much emphasis upon factional affiliation is probably a mistake, especially concerning the so-called Soviet and Yan'an factions. Defectors have often stated that the factional divisions were neither as clear-cut nor as meaningful in all cases as non-Communist sources alleged. Moreover, as a careful survey of this period reveals, increasingly the only meaningful faction was coming to be Kim Il-sung, and the crucial factor, one's personal relationship to Kim, irrespective of one's background. Nevertheless, there were differences in background, educational experience, and even culture that stemmed from the heterogeneous nature of the Korean revolutionary movement. And this did constitute a political problem, as the Korean Communists themselves readily admitted. While factionalism may not have been as important as some South Korean writers have indicated, and undoubtedly involved many more ambivalent and poorly defined factions, it remained a crucial issue in this period."[8]
  2. ^ The following stood on trial in August 1953:[17]

References[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ Suh 1981, p. 285.
  2. ^ Suh 1981, pp. 291–2.
  3. ^ Suh 1981, p. 271.
  4. ^ Suh 1981, p. 271 & 319–22.
  5. ^ a b c Suh 1981, p. 277.
  6. ^ a b Suh 1981, pp. 285–91.
  7. ^ a b Lankov 2002, p. 82.
  8. ^ Scalapino & Lee 1972, pp. 479–80.
  9. ^ Suh 1981, pp. 319–20.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Suh 1988, p. 91.
  11. ^ Suh 1981, pp. 318–20.
  12. ^ a b c Suh 1981, p. 321.
  13. ^ a b c d e Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 438.
  14. ^ a b c Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 436.
  15. ^ a b Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 437.
  16. ^ a b c Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 440.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Scalapino & Lee 1972, pp. 440–1.
  18. ^ Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 441.
  19. ^ Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 444.
  20. ^ Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 448.
  21. ^ Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 449–51.
  22. ^ Scalapino & Lee 1972, p. 451.
  23. ^ Suh 1981, p. 286.
  24. ^ a b c Suh 1981, pp. 319–22.
  25. ^ a b c Suh 1981, pp. 392–93.
  26. ^ a b c Suh 1981, p. 448.
  27. ^ a b c Suh 1981, pp. 459–82.
  28. ^ a b c Paik 1993, pp. 821–26.

Bibliography[]

Books:

  • Lankov, Andrey (2002). From Stalin to Kim Il Sung: The Formation of North Korea, 1945–1960. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0813531175.
  • Scalapino, Robert; Lee, Chong-sik (1972). Communism in Korea: The Movement. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520020801.
  • Suh, Dae-sook (1981). Korean Communism 1945–1980: A Reference Guide to the Political System (1st ed.). University Press of Hawaii. ISBN 0-8248-0740-5.
  • Suh, Dae-sook (1988). Kim Il Sung: The North Korean Leader (1st ed.). Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231065736.
  • Suh, Dae-Sook; Lee, Chae-Jin (2014). Political Leadership in Korea. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-80280-0.

Dissertations:

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