Jiang was born in
Zhaoyuan, Shandong Province. He joined the military in 1969, serving in the far northwestern region of Xinjiang, and joined the Communist Party in December 1970. In 1974, he was sent back to his home province, and assigned a job as a worker in a mechanical factory. In 1975 he joined the Publicity Department of the city of
Jinan, thereby beginning his political career. In 1981, he briefly attended
Shandong Normal University in a cadres-training class. In December 1982, Jiang joined the Jinan municipal party committee, working for its research office and as an office secretary. In 1985 he was selected to work for the
General Office of the Chinese Communist Party, the party's central administrative organ, where Jiang would serve under four chiefs -
Qiao Shi,
Wang Zhaoguo,
Wen Jiabao, and
Zeng Qinghong. In July 1995 he was elevated to deputy director of the General Office (vice-minister rank), and the head of the department of administration for organizations directly subordinate to the Central Committee. In October 2002, shortly before the
16th Party Congress, Jiang was transferred to Chongqing to serve as deputy party chief in the interior municipality. In May 2005, he was named the head of the commission for migrant re-settlement as part of the
Three Gorges Dam project. In June 2006, he was again transferred to Beijing to serve as the executive vice president and Party Group Secretary of the
National School of Administration (minister-level). In March 2008, he was named Party Secretary of Shandong. In the lead-up to the 18th Party Congress, there was initial speculation that Jiang would be named head of the Organization Department and enter the Politburo; however he ultimately remained in Shandong. He left the post in April 2017 and became a vice-chair on the
National People's Congress Financial and Economic Affairs Committee; at the time, Jiang was the longest serving provincial-level party chief in the country, and one of the few provincial party chiefs to be serving in their native province (see also
Han Zheng). He was an alternate of the
16th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, and a full member of the
17th and
18th Central Committees. He was also a member of the 9th
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and a deputy to the 10th
National People's Congress. ==References==