In a revealing personal account, a journalist gains newfound appreciation for China’s grassroots political advisory system through her father’s decade-long service as a local CPPCC member. The discovery began when an old classmate, now working in municipal government, messaged her after observing a political consultation session where her father—a lawyer from Macheng, Hubei province—delivered what was described as ‘thoughtful and substantial’ remarks.
Previously focused on covering high-level diplomacy and national events, the journalist had considered local governance matters distant from her professional interests. This unexpected message prompted her to investigate what exactly grassroots political advisers accomplish. Through conversations with her father, she learned how his legal practice directly informs his policy proposals, creating a vital bridge between judicial reality and legislative improvement.
His decade of service has produced concrete proposals addressing electric vehicle management, stone industry development, protection rights for children and elderly residents, and promotion of local chrysanthemum tea—all rooted in direct community engagement and judicial observation. The tangible outcomes include renovated urban streets, upgraded rural roads, and improved village sanitation facilities.
The narrative expands to the national level as CPPCC National Committee member Chen Zhonghong emphasizes that proposals most effectively addressed are those ‘smaller and more specific’ and ‘closely linked to people’s livelihoods.’ With expertise in vulnerable group protections, Chen describes her identical role as a bidirectional conduit—bringing policies to grassroots communities while channeling local concerns to decision-makers.
The account concludes by framing democracy not as abstract theory but as a practical process of bottom-up opinion aggregation, where national priorities emerge from daily life experiences and top-level designs originate from grassroots realities, embodying China’s whole-process people’s democracy.
