The recently concluded 20th party Congress contained few surprises, but in the words of the well-respected China scholar and former Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, the congress is destined to become an “era-defining event.” Here are our thoughts.
The meeting confirmed Xi Jinping as the paramount leader of China for the next five years and potentially for life. He has stacked the Politburo Standing Committee (PSC) with his allies and has removed anyone without a close personal relationship to him. The Standing Committee is composed of loyalists with longstanding connections with Xi and with whom he presumably trusts (see below for the list of new PSC Members). Several key personnel changes illustrate this, including:
- Loyalty trumps all else. The promotion to the PSC of Li Qiang, Shanghai Party boss who has overseen the city’s disastrous Zero-COVID policy. Li has a longstanding relationship with Xi and is likely to assume the premiership.
- Retirement of Liu He (politburo member and Vice-Premier). Liu was widely seen as a respected negotiator on trade issues with the United States.
- Retirements of Li Keqiang (Premier) and Wang Yang (Chairman of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference). Both are 67 years old but closely linked with Hu Jintao, General Secretary from 2003 to 2013, and often viewed as counterweights on economic policy.
- Demotion of Hu Chunhua. Hu, along with (since cashiered) Sun Zhengcai, was one of the youngest members of the 18th Politburo. He stayed on for the 19th Politburo but was left off the 20th, despite being only 59 years old. Hu Chunhua is also viewed as closely connected to Hu Jintao.
- Age matters, until it doesn’t. Zhang Youxia, Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission, was reappointed to the Politburo despite being 72 years old.
The abrupt removal of Hu Jintao, caught on video and broadcast globally, has excited speculation about these personnel shifts. The exact reason for Hu’s very public escort out of the Great Hall came only moments after the press was allowed in, though the exact reasons may never be fully made available to the public. Nonetheless, the event provided a powerful, if unintended, metaphor for the changes afoot.
It is worth noting that no women are in the Standing Committee of broader 24-member Politburo (that’s right, 24, a one seat reduction from the current 25); the one woman, currently in the twenty-five person Poliburo, Sun Chunlan, was not renominated). In his work report delivered last week, and through his appointments, it is clear that Xi will continue to emphasize the primacy of Marxist-Leninist ideology.
Xi’s call for “common prosperity” and his emphasis on “national security” have sent jitters through the markets. On the announcement of the new leadership line-up, both the Hong Kong exchange and Chinese company ADRs on U.S. exchanges fell sharply. The yuan fell to its lowest level since 2008. Particularly hard hit were the shares of Chinese internet companies. The few winners in the aftermath of the Party Congress were defense and security related firms.
During his work report, delivered at the opening of the Congress, Xi repeatedly returned to issues of national security and of threats facing the nation. He dropped the oft-used phrase describing geopolitics as a period of “peace and development,” and instead urged his compatriots to “prepare for the storm” that he sees brewing in international relations. Notably he did not use bellicose language when referring to Taiwan but did emphasize that long term unification was inevitable.
The implications are clear that Xi has gained supremacy and that his loyalists are now controlling all the key levers of power. Unfortunately, from what we know of Xi’s worldview, the consolidation of power in Xi’s hands implies that confrontation and friction will be the norm for U.S.-China relations for the foreseeable future.
The new members of the Standing Committee of the Politburo with their anticipated new roles are:
- Xi Jinping – General Secretary, and Chairman of Central Military Commission (and expected to be made President again next March)
- Li Qiang – Premier (expected)
- Zhao Leji – Chairman of the National People Congress (NPC; legislative body) (expected)
- Wang Huning – Chairman of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC; political advisory body) (expected)
- Cai Qi – Head of the Central Secretariat (expected)
- Ding Xuexiang – Executive Vice Premier (expected)
- Li Xi – Secretary of the Party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI)