Published on NCUSCR (http://www.ncuscr.org)
Young Political Leaders Delegation

  • Program Dates: May 17-June 1, 1977
  • Goal: Developing the capacity of next generation policy leaders
  • Type: Historic First, Study Tour
  • Category: Politics & Security, Governance & Civil Society, Next Generation Leaders
  • Keywords: politics, Leadership, Young
  • Places Visited: Shanghai, Wuxi JIANGSU, Beijing, Changsha, Hohhot
  • Program Partner(s): American Council of Young Political Leaders, Chinese People's Institute of Foreign Affairs
  • 15 young leaders in delegation

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descriptive_homepage_headline: 
Committee takes first group of young political leaders to China
homepage_abstract: 

Two years before normalization of relations, program provides young American elected officials and others involved in local and state politics with an opportunity to meet with their counterparts and increase their understanding of China.

At a glance info
Date: 
Program Dates: May 17-June 1, 1977
Event Date: 
May 16, 1977 - May 31, 1977
at_a_glance: 

15 young leaders in delegation

Under the National Committee’s auspices, a delegation of 17 young American political leaders – young persons serving in elected positions at the state or local level, or leaders of political organizations – visited the People’s Republic of China in May 1977. Assembled with the cooperation of the American Council of Young Political Leaders, it was the first such visit of its kind.

Thomas P. O’Neill III, lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, served as the delegation’s leader. R. Spencer Oliver, staff director of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe and former national president of the Young Democrats, and Audrey Rowe-Colom, chairwoman of the National Women’s Caucus and director of women’s activities at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, were deputy leaders. Neil Goldschmidt, future governor of Oregon, Sidney Barthelemy, future mayor of New Orleans, and Carol Bellamy, future New York City council president, and head of the Peace Corps and UNICEF, were also members of the group.

In China, the delegation members were the guests of the Chinese People’s Institute of Foreign Affairs, which arranged a full schedule of meetings and seminars with Chinese officials. In Beijing, among other activities, was a discussion with Vice Premier Li Xiannian, covering subjects ranging from U.S.-China relations to Chinese developmental priorities, and with Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Wang Haizheng, on China’s foreign policy. The itinerary also included stops in Beijing, Hohhot (and the Mongolian grasslands to the north), Changsha, Wushi, and Shanghai.


Source URL: http://www.ncuscr.org/programs/young-political-leaders-delegation