Liu Yiming, 27, another deputy, is focused on the rights of left-behind women in the countryside and laid-off women in the cities.
Liu runs the Snowflake Vocational Training School in Pingyu County, offering babysitting and maternity nurse training for women.
"We trained 800 women in 2017, 500 of whom were impoverished and received free training," said Liu, who also volunteers to match poor people with job opportunities.
A trained maternity nurse can earn more than 8,000 yuan (1,250 U.S. dollars) in Beijing and Shanghai, said Liu, who called for better supervision of the household service industry.
"It's a prejudiced view that post-90s are lazy and selfish," said Liu. "It's time for us to fulfill our social responsibilities."
Liu's view was echoed by Jiang Mingqin, 28, a deputy to the provincial people's congress of Guangdong in south China.
"The post-90s are more pragmatic, creative and more willing to take risks," said Jiang, a manager at Guangzhou Kugou Computer Technology Co. Ltd, a music streaming and download service.
Jiang is spearheading a project to invite the most popular users on Kugou's live-streaming platform to sing with left-behind rural children via the service in order to raise public awareness.
During the annual legislative meeting, she will propose a bill asking for more government support to left-behind children.
"In the past, I only cared about the interests of my company. Now I need to consider more people's interests and work for their welfare," said Jiang.
【国内英语资讯:China Focus: Post-90s generation emerges as political force in China】相关文章:
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