Central Executive Committee
A Central Executive Committee is a governing body with executive power in parties, governments, or private organizations. The term may refer to one of the following:
General
    
- Central Executive Committee (PAP), the highest ruling committee within Singapore's People's Action Party (PAP)
 - Central Executive Committee (Philippines), an insurgent revolutionary government established by Francisco Macabulos in 1898
 - Central Executive Committee of the Pakistan Peoples Party
 
Former Soviet Union
    
- Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union (1922-1938)
 - All-Russian Central Executive Committee (1917-1937)
 - All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee (1917-1938)
 - All-Byelorussian Central Executive Committee (1920–1938)
 - All-Caucasian Central Executive Committee (1922–1936)
 - Litbel Central Executive Committee (1919–1920)
 - Centrosibir, name for the Central Executive Committee of Soviets of Siberia (1917)
 - Rumcherod, name for the Central Executive Committee of Soviets of Romanian Front, Black See Fleet, and Odessa Oblast (1917–1918)
 - Central Executive Committee of the Navy (June-November 1917)
 
See also
    
- Executive Committee (disambiguation)
 - National Executive Committee (disambiguation)
 - Category:Executive committees of political parties
 - Committee § Executive committee
 - Central committee
 - Politburo
 
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