Politburo (pronounced pol-it-byoor-oh or poh-lit-byoor-oh)
(1) The executive committee and chief policymaking body of a Communist Party (often in lowercase). In the English-speaking world, sometimes erroneously written as politbureau or in hyphenated form.
(2) A casual term for a senior policymaking body in a political organisation, generally consisting of members who either are appointed by the party in control of the organisation or who attain membership through their personal political affiliations (sometimes derogatory).
1917:
From the Russian Политбюро́ (Politbjuró)
as shortening of полити́ческое бюро́ (politícheskoe
byuró) (political bureau). As a
general principle, a politburo, in general, is the chief committee of a
communist party and often exercises executive authority. The German form is Politisches Büro abbreviated as Politbüro and, like the Spanish Politburó, is directly loaned from
Russian. Chinese uses a calque (政治局; Zhèngzhìjú in pinyin), from which the
Vietnamese (Bộ Chính trị), and Korean
(정치국, 政治局 Jeongchiguk)
terms derive.
1917 and after
The first politburo was Russian, created in 1917 by the Bolsheviks, the initial membership of seven including Lenin, Zinoviev, Kamenev, Trotsky and Stalin. Although the USSR’s Politburo was notionally the highest policy-making government authority, it was usually subservient to the office of General Secretary of the Communist Party, especially during Comrade Stalin’s (1878–1953; leader of the Soviet Union 1922-1953) time. In an example of the re-branding which happened often in the USSR, it was known as the Presidium between 1952 and 1966. Many communist nations adopted the model during the twentieth century but politburos exist now only in the five remaining communist countries, China, the DPRK (North Korea), Laos, Vietnam, and Cuba. Those five long outlasted the Russian original which was dissolved in 1991 after the breakup of the Soviet Union.
Old white men: the Twenty-sixth Politburo (1981–1986) of the USSR (1981 press release).
The last four leaders of the USSR (Leonid Brezhnev (1964–1982), Yuri Andropov (1982-1984), Konstantin Chernenko (1984-1985) and Mikhail Gorbachev (1985-1991) all appear here.
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