Western Hills Group
Western Hills Group | |||||||||
The Western Hills Group was founded at a conference, shown above, held in Biyun Temple in Beijing on November 23, 1925. | |||||||||
Chinese | 西山会议派 | ||||||||
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The Western Hills Group was a faction of the Chinese Nationalist Party, or KMT, active in the 1920s. The faction was formed at a meeting of KMT leaders opposed to communist influence held at Biyun Temple in the Western Hills district of Beijing in November 1925.[1] About half the KMT leadership attended the meeting.[2] The group included Lin Sen, Ju Zheng, Zou Lu, and Xie Chi.[1] In the three-way struggle for party leadership that followed the death of Sun Yat-sen, the group supported Hu Hanmin against leftist Wang Jingwei and centerist Chiang Kai-shek. Hu was Sun's intended successor, but he did not identify with the group.
History
The Nationalist Party had won a nationwide parliamentary election held in 1912. Lin Sen was selected Speaker in April 1913. In July, parliamentary government collapsed and the KMT leaders went into exile. Under Soviet sponsorship, the KMT and the Communist Party formed a "united front" in 1923. This agreement allowed the KMT to receive Soviet arms and establish a foothold in Guangzhou, a major city in southern China. The KMT and the communists were thus allies against the Beiyang warlords, who were backed by the Japanese.
After the death of Sun in March 1925, the KMT swung to the left under Wang, who formed an alliance with the communists. Right-wing favorite Hu Hanmin was pushed out of the leadership and sent to the Soviet Union in August. The Western Hills Conference held on November 23 included fifteen KMT leaders. The group billed itself as the "Fourth CEC Plenum." That is to say, it claimed to be acting as the KMT's executive committee.[3] The group's first act was to pass a "Manifesto to Strike the Communist Faction from Party Register."[3] On December 2, it passed a resolution to expel the four communist members of the KMT executive committee, as well as the five communist alternate members. (This included Mao Zedong, at this time an alternate member.)[3] On December 4, the group voted to terminate the contract of Soviet agent Mikhail Borodin.[3] On December 5, Wang was expelled from the KMT for a period of six months.[3]
Wang's supporters did not recognize these decisions. They argued that the meeting in Beijing had failed to achieve a quorum.[3] Under the KMT bylaws, a quorum was fifteen full executive committee members. Only fourteen of the Western Hills attendees were full members.
Lin Sen lent his prestige to the meeting by acting as convener. But otherwise he was detached, refusing even to comment on the resolutions.[4] A "Society to Promote the Study of Sun Wenism," modeled after the KMT's various communist leagues, was created to promote non-communist views among KMT members.
Wang responded to the Western Hills meeting by convening a Second National Party Conference in Guangzhou on January 1, 1926. The resolutions of a party conference overroad those of the executive committee, regardless of the quorum issue. The conference expelled the Western Hills participants from the party.[5] Although the conference was a triumph for Wang and the left, it also provoked a reaction from those concerned about communist influence. Afterward, the Western Hills Group set up a rival KMT headquarters in Shanghai.
The KMT suffered another split in January 1927. Wang's supporters began meeting in Hankou while supporters of military commander Chiang Kai-shek began meeting separately in Nanchang. In March, Chiang's forces captured Shanghai and Nanjing. On April 19, a "National Government" was proclaimed in Nanjing with Hu as party chairman and Chiang as military commander. This government represented a merger of the Shanghai and Nanchang factions. It immediately conducted a purge of communists and their allies.[1]
After intercepting a message from Moscow calling for a coup, Hankou purged its communists on July 15, 1927. In August, the Western Hills Group brokered a reconciliation between the Wang's Hankou-based faction and Chiang's Nanjing-based faction. Chiang resigned his position and took a trip to Japan to facilitate the reconciliation.
With Hu chairman of a reunited KMT and Chiang absent, the Western Hills Group was for a brief interval the party's dominant faction. The field commanders, however, remained the kingmakers. On January 6, 1928, they restored Chiang as commander in chief.[6] Hu, meanwhile, took an extended trip to Europe. In February, Chiang dismissed the Western Hills ministers and appointed the Chen brothers to prominent party organization and security positions. This "CC Clique" of Chen Guofu and Chen Lifu soon eclipsed and absorbed the Western Hills Group.[7] When Hu returned in October, he was appointed president of the Legislative Yuan with Lin Sen as vice president. The Hu-Chiang alliance lasted until February 1931, when Chiang put Hu under house arrest.
Although the Western Hills Group is often labeled "extreme right" or "far right," its resolutions called only for the expulsion of communists from the KMT. They did not exclude the possibility of cooperating with them. This position can be considered more moderate than that of Chiang, who pursued a series of "extermination campaigns" against the communists beginning in December 1930.
Lin Sen served as Chinese president from 1931 to 1943. However, this was a nominal position without influence on policy. As for Ju Zheng, he administered China's court system from 1932 to 1947 as president of the Judicial Yuan.[8]
References
- 1 2 3 Gao, James, Z., Historical Dictionary of Modern China (1800-1949). "West Hill Group". The Scarecrow Press, 2009.
- ↑ Perkins, Dorothy, Japan Goes to War: A Chronology of Japanese Military Expansion from the Meiji Era to the Attack on Pearl Harbor (1868-1941) DIANE Publishing, 1997, p. 101.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Clarence Martin Wilbur, Julie Lien-ying How, Missionaries of Revolution: Soviet Advisers and Nationalist China, 1920-1927, (1989), pp. 188-192.
- ↑ 林森在西山会议派中的地位, 林友华, 2000-02
- ↑ Chien-nung Li, Ssu-yu Teng, Jeremy Ingalls, The Political History of China, 1840-1928 (1956), p. 501.
- ↑ Elleman, Bruce, Moscow and the Emergence of Communist Power in China, 1925–30: The Nanchang Uprising and the Birth of the Red Army, Routledge, (2009), p. 5.
- ↑ Wakeman, Frederic, Spymaster: Dai Li and the Chinese Secret Service, University of California Press, 2003, p. 91
- ↑ George Ernest Morrison, Hui-Min Lo, The Correspondence of G. E. Morrison 1912-1920, Cambridge University Press, 1978, p. 378, note 2.