After university Luo Huining started working for the provincial government of Anhui, rising to the position of Propaganda Chief of the province in 1999. He had a brief stint as Communist Party Secretary of Chaohu prefecture from 1998 to 1999.[2] He spent the next three years earning a master's degree in management science and engineering the Business School of the Chinese University of Science and Technology and was awarded a doctorate in economics by the People's University of China in 2003.[1]
In April 2003 Luo was transferred from Anhui where he grew up, to distant Qinghai to become a Deputy Party Committee Secretary and president of the Party School of the CCP Provincial Committee.[1] In January 2010, he was promoted to Governor of Qinghai, succeeding Song Xiuyan. In March 2013 he was again promoted to Communist Party Secretary of Qinghai, replacing Qiang Wei who had been transferred to Jiangxi province.[3] During his term, the party pursued increasingly restrictive controls on a large Tibetan minority.[4]
On June 30, 2016, he replaced Wang Rulin as the party secretary of Shanxi[2] where he spoke of his "all-out efforts to enforce party discipline" there.[5]
On October 14, 2020, the United States Department of State released a report on 10 individuals who materially contributed to the failure of the China to meet its obligations under the Sino–British Joint Declaration and Hong Kong's Basic Law. Luo was on the list.[15] Reporting at that time took note repeatedly of his ascension.
On January 14, 2023, Lou Huining was succeeded by Zheng Yanxiong as the director of the Liaison Office.[16]
References
^ abcd"Luo Huining". China Vitae. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Retrieved 2020-01-12.