A year before a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) conclave that could decide who would eventually replace him as China’s next leader, Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) is maneuvering to reduce the power of a rival political bloc while seeking to get members of his own faction onto the country’s top ruling body, according to three sources with ties to the leadership.
Xi is trying to prevent the Communist Youth League faction from dominating the party’s seven-member Standing Committee during the 19th congress next year, the sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“There is no way Xi will let the Youth League have a majority in the Standing Committee,” one of the sources told reporters.
Illustration: Yusha
The once-powerful faction is struggling to remain relevant after the Youth League’s annual budget was slashed by half this year and as it was blasted in state media for being “too elitist and inefficient.”
Xi’s hand was widely believed to have been behind these attacks, the sources and diplomats said.
The faction is made up of current and former members of the Youth League, the Communist Party’s youth wing with 88 million members aged between 14 and 28. It includes mainly party and government officials with no particular political pedigree, but who have for decades been groomed to become potential future rulers.
It was previously a stepping stone to the top and the faction is a political stronghold of Hu Jintao (胡錦濤), Xi’s immediate predecessor as president, party and military chief.
Neither the Youth League nor the State Council Information Office, which is both the Cabinet spokesman’s office and speaks on behalf of the party, responded to requests for comment for this article. There is no foreign media access to the personal office of Xi or to the offices of any other senior Chinese leader.
Among those on the Standing Committee, only Xi, 63, and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (李克強), 61 — who is a member of the Youth League faction — will not have reached retirement age by the time of next year’s congress. They are both widely expected to retain their No. 1 and No. 2 spots on the committee, the sources and diplomats said.
The other five are most likely to retire based on what has happened at previous congresses.
If the three potential Youth League candidates — Vice President Li Yuanchao (李源潮), Vice Premier Wang Yang (汪洋) and Guangdong provincial party boss Hu Chunhua (胡春華, no relation to former president Hu) — were elected at the congress, the Youth League faction would have a majority on the body and that would be unacceptable to Xi, the sources said.
All three are currently members of the politburo.
LOYALTY
These people said it was not immediately clear whether Xi is planning any other moves against the Youth League faction. At least one of the faction’s candidates is expected to get elected whatever Xi’s efforts, the sources said.
Xi wants to promote those most loyal to him so that he can push through reforms to buoy the slowing economy and handpick a successor to ensure his legacy, they said.
Xi’s group is known as the “Zhejiang Clique” after Zhejiang Province, where be built support when he was governor and party boss from 2002 to 2007. He also has the support of the so-called “princelings,” or red aristocrats, because like him they had parents who were senior party, government or military officials.
One of the sources with ties to the leadership, who meets regularly with top people in Beijing, said: “Xi is 100 percent out to stop the Youth League faction. He wants his own people in place.”
It is too early to say how many of Xi’s supporters are likely to make it onto the Standing Committee, but there are at least two candidates — also both already on the politburo — who are close to Xi, the sources and diplomats said.
They are his chief of staff Ling Jihua (令計劃) and the party’s Organization Department Head Zhao Leji (趙樂際).
Xi’s father was Xi Zhongxun (習仲勳), a communist revolutionary before the 1949 formation of the People’s Republic of China and a vice-premier during Mao Zedong’s (毛澤東) reign. The faction also includes other allies from the political bases Xi built in various provinces and cities when he was a local official and from Beijing’s prestigious Tsinghua University, which he attended.
The Youth League, known as the party’s “helping hand and reserve army,” is the entry point for those wanting to join the Chinese Communist Party. It recruits and trains the nation’s best and brightest, mostly university students. The older officials are considered to be members of the faction, though they are no longer members of the actual league.
The faction’s image suffered a setback when in 2012, Ling Jihua (令計劃), a top aide to then-president Hu, tried to cover up the circumstances around the death of his son in a luxury sports car crash. It was an embarrassment for the party which is sensitive to perceptions that children of top officials lead rich, privileged lifestyles and are completely out of touch with the general population. Ling was subsequently charged with corruption and sentenced to life imprisonment.
The third main faction in the party is the so-called “Shanghai Gang” led by 90-year-old former Chinese president Jiang Zemin (江澤民), which consists of officials who cut their teeth in the city. Its power is also expected to wane in the shake-up, the sources and diplomats said.
The three groups do not have major policy differences and all believe in seeking to bolster the party’s control of China. Some officials are even allied with more than one faction and have different personal loyalties.
The Youth League faction is not only facing a loss of power on the Standing Committee. It is also likely to lose many of its 14 positions on the 25-member politburo, which is also a major forum for decisionmaking. Most of the 14 will have reached retirement age next year and are likely to be replaced by Xi loyalists, the sources and diplomats said.
CONCESSIONS?
However, Xi is walking a fine line to ensure that the Youth League faction does not feel totally left out in the cold, which could antagonize Hu and destroy party harmony. As a result, some of the group’s members are set to get new positions, though not on the Standing Committee, the sources said.
For example, the sources said that Hu’s son, Hu Haifeng (胡海峰), has been shortlisted for promotion to become mayor of the important eastern port city of Ningbo, a vice ministerial-level position. Hu Haifeng is currently mayor of the less important city of Jiaxing, near Shanghai.
Hu Haifeng could not be reached for comment.
And on Thursday last week, Xi told party members to study the recently published works of Hu Jintao, calling them an “important part of the party’s political building and theoretical training of party members,” the Xinhua news agency reported.
The most notable rising member of the Youth League faction who has been talked about by China analysts as a potential future Chinese president is Guangdong’s party boss, Hu Chunhua, 53. As one of the two youngest politburo members, Hu Chunhua is considered by Sinologists to be a frontrunner for further promotion to the Standing Committee.
However, his chances could dim if protests in the southern Chinese fishing village of Wukan spiral out of control, according to the sources.
The authorities cracked down this month after villagers had marched for more than 80 days in protest at the jailing of a democratically elected village chief.
Because much of what former US president Donald Trump says is unhinged and histrionic, it is tempting to dismiss all of it as bunk. Yet the potential future president has a populist knack for sounding alarums that resonate with the zeitgeist — for example, with growing anxiety about World War III and nuclear Armageddon. “We’re a failing nation,” Trump ranted during his US presidential debate against US Vice President Kamala Harris in one particularly meandering answer (the one that also recycled urban myths about immigrants eating cats). “And what, what’s going on here, you’re going to end up in World War
Earlier this month in Newsweek, President William Lai (賴清德) challenged the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to retake the territories lost to Russia in the 19th century rather than invade Taiwan. He stated: “If it is for the sake of territorial integrity, why doesn’t [the PRC] take back the lands occupied by Russia that were signed over in the treaty of Aigun?” This was a brilliant political move to finally state openly what many Chinese in both China and Taiwan have long been thinking about the lost territories in the Russian far east: The Russian far east should be “theirs.” Granted, Lai issued
On Tuesday, President William Lai (賴清德) met with a delegation from the Hoover Institution, a think tank based at Stanford University in California, to discuss strengthening US-Taiwan relations and enhancing peace and stability in the region. The delegation was led by James Ellis Jr, co-chair of the institution’s Taiwan in the Indo-Pacific Region project and former commander of the US Strategic Command. It also included former Australian minister for foreign affairs Marise Payne, influential US academics and other former policymakers. Think tank diplomacy is an important component of Taiwan’s efforts to maintain high-level dialogue with other nations with which it does
On Sept. 2, Elbridge Colby, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy and force development, wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal called “The US and Taiwan Must Change Course” that defends his position that the US and Taiwan are not doing enough to deter the People’s Republic of China (PRC) from taking Taiwan. Colby is correct, of course: the US and Taiwan need to do a lot more or the PRC will invade Taiwan like Russia did against Ukraine. The US and Taiwan have failed to prepare properly to deter war. The blame must fall on politicians and policymakers