Cui Yuying


Cui Yuying is a Chinese politician of Tibetan ethnicity, serving since January 2015 as the deputy head of the Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of China and the deputy director of the State Council Information Office. She was the first ethnic minority deputy head in the propaganda department's history.

Career

Cui was born in Changle County, Shandong province, but moved to Nyingchi, Tibet, in her youth. She taught elementary school there before enrolling in the department of forestry at the Agriculture and Herders College of Tibet, where she graduated from in 1982. She then went on to complete a study term at the Beijing Forestry University, then returned to Tibet to work in the regional government's planning department, then the audit and economic planning department.
Starting in 1987 Cui began serving at the Tibet division of China Life, where she worked in finance, operations, and motor vehicle insurance. By 1996 she was promoted to vice president of the Tibet division of China Life. In 1999 she was promoted to regional president. As an aspiring and relatively young professional, Cui went on to study at the Central Party School in Beijing and earned a political economics graduate degree there. By July 2002, Cui was named Vice Chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, entering the sub-provincial ranks for the first time at 44 years of age. In October 2006 she was elevated again to the regional Party Standing Committee to serve as Tibet regional propaganda chief, entering the inner sanctum of political decision making in Tibet. Her profile was unique because she was a woman of Tibetan heritage; females and ethnic minorities are rarely selected to enter provincial-level standing committees.
In December 2011 she was transferred to Beijing to work for the State Council Information Office as deputy director, and in January 2015, she was named deputy head of the Central Propaganda Department. Cui was the first ethnic-minority deputy propaganda head in the department's history, dating back to the 1920s.