{"id":33564,"date":"2022-11-01T22:41:19","date_gmt":"2022-11-01T14:41:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/chinaworker.info\/?p=33564"},"modified":"2022-11-01T23:09:18","modified_gmt":"2022-11-01T15:09:18","slug":"china-xi-purges-ccps-top-ranks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinaworker.info\/en\/2022\/11\/01\/33564\/","title":{"rendered":"China: Xi purges CCP\u2019s top ranks"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>At the Communist Party\u2019s 20th Congress dictator Xi Jinping made a clean sweep of the party-state\u2019s top organs including the once powerful Standing Committee, but does the purge translate into greater strength or stability?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Vincent Kolo, chinaworker.info<\/p>\n<p>It was never in doubt that at October\u2019s five-yearly CCP\u2008Congress Xi Jinping would be crowned de facto Emperor. He now starts a third-term as CCP general secretary and commander-in-chief of the army, which can be extended indefinitely as long as Xi himself is the one who decides. At the National People\u2019s Congress (NPC) in March he will be confirmed again as president, a less important position. Aside from rubber-stamping the extension of his rule, the 20th\u2008CCP\u2008Congress was a giant stage to project Xi\u2019s unrivalled grip on state power.<\/p>\n<p>The \u201cmost powerful leader since Mao\u201d was the intended theme, repeated in almost all global media coverage. Not really, is our reply. Xi\u2019s hold over the CCP machinery and purge of potential rivals is indeed unprecedented. But how much real additional power this grants the dictator is an open question given the titanic scale of the crisis facing China today.<\/p>\n<p>The economy has entered a Japanese phase of slow growth weighed down by the deflationary collapse of financial bubbles. Goldman Sachs estimates next year\u2019s GDP will be a whole $2 trillion lower than the regime\u2019s projections from January this year. The now abandoned 5.5 percent GDP target from the March NPC was the lowest target for three decades, but will be remembered as hopelessly unrealistic.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Multiple crises<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The property crisis that began in mid-2021 shows no signs of bottoming out. There is an estimated 7 billion square meters of residential property under construction and unsold. That measures up against 1.76 billion square meters sold in the peak year 2020, before the crash. At the same time marriages \u2013 with a clear connection to house sales \u2013 have plummeted from 13.5 million when Xi came to power, to 7.6 million last year. Economist Andy Xie says \u201cif every marriage leads to a property purchase and the number of marriages doesn\u2019t fall further, it would still take about 10 years to digest the inventory.\u201d (South China Morning Post, 22 September).<\/p>\n<p>Three years of Zero Covid have trapped society and the economy in a real-life version of \u2018Groundhog Day\u2019, an ever-repeating loop. Since the congress, lockdowns have spread to 28 cities and currently affect 207 million people. Urumqi, the capital of strife-torn Xinjiang, has been in lockdown since August. Censured reports from Xinjiang say that 13 people died from the effects of disinfectant sprayed in their homes by Covid enforcers (<em>dabai<\/em>). The death of 27 passengers in a bus accident in Guizhou triggered an online outcry. The passengers, part of a group of 3,000, were being forcibly transported from the capital Guiyang to a distant quarantine facility, on dangerous roads at two in the morning (!).<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe\u2019re all on that bus\u201d became a popular online protest slogan. Since the start of the pandemic in 2019, only two people have died of Covid in Guizhou province. After the CCP congress, a rare protest took place in the Tibetan capital Lhasa, significant also because those protesting the Covid restrictions were Han Chinese migrants not ethnic Tibetans.<\/p>\n<p>Also after the congress, Foxconn\u2019s largest factory in China at Zhengzhou, which employs 200,000, saw a mass breakout of migrant workers escaping lockdown. Videos shared online showed thousands trekking across wasteland carrying their bags and bedding from the factory, aiming to get back to their home villages. There are unconfirmed reports of paramilitary troops being sent to the Foxconn plant. Another mass escape was attempted by tourists at Shanghai\u2019s Disneyland, which was placed under snap lockdown for the second time this year.<\/p>\n<p>How does the power struggle waged inside the 20th Congress relate to the accumulation of suffering and discontent outside? Xi\u2019s mission from the start, in 2012, was to \u201csave the CCP\u201d, to centralise power and to transition from authoritarian rule under a committee, to a form of one-man rule which owes more to China\u2019s imperial era than to Maoism. Through increased repression and a digital surveillance state that has out-Orwelled Orwell, combined with militaristic nationalism and \u201cWestern threat\u201d propaganda, Xi has tried to stare down the many social, economic, political and geopolitical crises that have arisen. But the next period will provide even more severe tests.<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u201cSecurity\u201d is number one<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>This was reflected in Xi\u2019s almost two-hour long work report. The most important word he used was \u201csecurity\u201d which was mentioned 91 times, almost double the mentions from Xi\u2019s speech of five years ago. This shows the CCP leader\u2019s fears of social explosions at home as well as external threats. \u201cTaiwan\u201d was mentioned 12 times, a slight increase on 2017, and drew the loudest applause from the congress, but that is a Pavlovian reaction and doesn\u2019t tell us so much about what Xi and his team are really planning. If anything, the tone of Xi\u2019s speech was more cautious and less bombastic than five years ago. What this reveals is that, behind the rhetoric, his regime is feeling intense pressure from the Cold War, and the accelerating decoupling process which is exacerbating China\u2019s economic downturn. Xi wants to try to de-escalate tensions with the Biden administration, to at least place some limits on the pace of escalation.<\/p>\n<p>When the 20th Congress closed it became clear that the new 24-man Politburo and its seven-man Standing Committee (PSC) were stacked with Xi\u2019s supporters. This is \u201cMaximum Xi\u201d proclaimed Foreign Policy magazine. Formerly powerful CCP\u2008factions like those led by ex-leaders Jiang Zemin (the \u2018Shanghai gang\u2019 or \u2018Princeling faction\u2019) and Hu Jintao (the \u2018Communist Youth League faction\u2019 a.k.a. <em>tuanpai<\/em>) that were already largely neutralised have now been completely eliminated from these two most important CCP organs.<\/p>\n<p>Many commentators had expected Xi to make a concession to the <em>tuanpai<\/em> in particular, offering them a small role in the carve-up of top seats and, possibly, to retain their hold on the premier\u2019s position. The current premier Li Keqiang who retires in March 2023 is from the tuanpai. Li and other leading <em>tuanpai<\/em> representatives profile themselves as the disciples of Deng Xiaoping\u2019s reform policy (the term used for China\u2019s capitalist restoration).<\/p>\n<p>In the cryptic style that is the norm in CCP politics, Li Keqiang has aimed some muted criticisms at Xi\u2019s policies, for example over the crippling application of the Zero-Covid policy and Xi\u2019s completely delusional claim to have \u201ceradicated poverty\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>The premier\u2019s portfolio has however been downgraded in importance since the early years of Xi\u2019s reign. Traditionally with overall control of China\u2019s economic policy, this has only been very partially the case in recent years. The same could also be said of the Politburo and PSC, which have faded in importance as Xi\u2019s expanding \u201ccore\u201d role crowds out everything else. Therefore, the speculation about the next premier and the possibility of minor concessions to rival factions, would only have had a symbolic character and not fundamentally affected the political direction of Xi\u2019s rule.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Compromise?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Rumours before the 20th Congress suggested Xi had perhaps struck a limited deal with the <em>tuanpai<\/em> faction, to throw them a bone, within the context of the further consolidation of his grip on power. The logic for any such compromise was not that Xi needed this or that his position is at this stage under threat from the CCP\u2019s continuing power struggle. This is despite the fact that in the real world, Xi\u2019s position has undoubtedly been weakened as a result of the dire economic situation and Cold War setbacks. But his strength within the organs of the CCP-state shows that the interests of the capitalist system as a whole require an even more rigidly authoritarian regime.<\/p>\n<p>As we have pointed out the anti-Xi factions lack strength, just as they lack any coherent alternative policy. Their \u201copposition\u201d is more a mood of alarm over the ruinous direction of the economy especially. They see China heading towards increasing international isolation and economic setbacks. The logic for Xi to make any concessions to these forces would therefore only have been to offer some reassurance to the financial markets and private sector capitalists that he was prepared to adjust some of his nationalist policies which have cost the capitalists huge sums of money.<\/p>\n<p>According to this discourse the <em>tuanpai<\/em> are regarded as economic \u201cmoderates\u201d, more committed than Xi to continuing Deng\u2019s economic reforms, which offer greater advantages to the private sector. Capitalist commentators were therefore anxious for signs from the 20th Congress that Xi would allow some checks and balances, if only very slight ones, as he began his lifetime rule project. This was not the case. In the end, Xi opted for a clean sweep of the Politburo and PSC with not even a single seat left to the \u201copposition\u201d. Xi\u2019s need to demonstrate his power, to show no quarter towards his internal critics, outweighed the rationale for concessions to appease the market.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Stock market rout<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On Monday 24 October, the day after Xi led the six other members of the new PSC\u2008onto the stage to present them, the stock markets tanked. The ten biggest US-listed Chinese companies, including Alibaba and Pinduoduo, lost $68 billion in a day. These ten firms were valued at $1.6 trillion in February 2021, but now stand at $401 billion. It\u2019s hard not to laugh when we read that Alibaba\u2019s Jack Ma lost $900 million during that one day.<\/p>\n<p>For the Hong Kong stock market this was its worst day since the 2008 crisis, with a drop of 6.4 percent. Over five days following the congress, Hong Kong\u2019s index for mainland companies suffered its worst result ever. The yuan slid even further against the dollar as financial speculators sold the Chinese currency, which has fallen 17 percent since the start of the year.<\/p>\n<p>It didn\u2019t help that the government chose this day to publish its quarterly GDP results, having mysteriously postponed their release during the week of the congress. The delay increased suspicions that Beijing was again cooking its books. The reported GDP\u2008growth of 3.9 percent for the July-September quarter (compared to 0.4 percent in April-June), while considerably short of the official 5.5 percent target, still looks inflated.<\/p>\n<p>Stock market turmoil has continued, with China\u2019s main CSI 300\u2008Index now down 35 percent since January, adjusted for currency volatility. Measured in dollars the CSI\u2008300 is down 51 percent. No surprises then that the capitalists inside and outside China are despondent over the outcome of the congress.<\/p>\n<p>Thomas Gatley of Gavekal Dragonomics in Beijing summed it up this way: \u201cInvestors were imagining a scenario where Xi basically got his own way, but there would still be some adults in the room with some kind of pro-market pushback. Now there won\u2019t be anyone in the room saying, \u2018we need to pull back a little bit\u2019. If everyone there is just nodding their heads, there\u2019s nothing to stop share prices falling as far as they can.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Of course, for working class people and the oppressed masses there are very different implications from the 20th Congress. Let the capitalists weep over the stock market. The composition of the new PSC, full of Xi\u2019s \u2018yes men\u2019, signifies he is doubling down on key policies such as Zero-Covid, with its unprecedented level of social control and digitally enhanced repression. In numerous but typically cryptic ways, the congress signalled the Zero-Covid policy will continue through 2023 and perhaps longer.<\/p>\n<p>Three articles penned by Zhong Yin, believed to be a code name for the regime, said the country had to continue the Zero Covid strategy, adding that only if the epidemic was under control would the economy be stabilized. During the congress it was announced that China now has the capacity to conduct one billion PCR\u2008tests every day. Shanghai, where a two-month lockdown in the spring caused massive discontent, has begun recruiting 1,000 new test-and-trace operatives on two-year contracts \u2013 hardly a sign of an imminent change of policy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Purges and promotions<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In fact, the Zero-Covid policy is also a political tool used by Xi Jinping in the power struggle before the congress. Those who slavishly followed the policy have been promoted while those who procrastinated have been purged. Chief among those promoted to the PSC is Shanghai\u2019s former CCP boss Li Qiang.<\/p>\n<p>Li became a detested figure during the city\u2019s epic lockdown, with multiple scandals revealing mismanagement, inefficiency and of course brutality. But as a loyalist and member of Xi\u2019s \u2018Zhijiang New Army\u2019 (the name of Xi\u2019s faction, formed mostly from those who previously served with him in the provinces of Zhejiang and Fujian) who brutally stood the course on Zero Covid, Li has been rewarded with the number two spot in the regime and is tipped to become premier next March. Also promoted to the PSC were the CCP leaders of Beijing and Guangdong province, Cai Qi and Li Xi. Like Li Qiang, they are regarded as trusted members of Xi\u2019s faction.<\/p>\n<p>The incident that generated the biggest reaction from ordinary people however was the sensational removal of Xi\u2019s predecessor, the former CCP leader Hu Jintao, from the congress stage on the final day. The aged leader who is evidently in poor health seemed to resist being moved and was \u201chelped\u201d out of his seat by two security officials.<\/p>\n<p>This has triggered a great deal of speculation. Was Hu in some way expressing dissent with the final list of names presented for the Politburo and PSC? A theory is doing the rounds that Hu had only at that moment discovered that his <em>tuanpai<\/em> prot\u00e9g\u00e9 \u201cLittle Hu\u201d Hu Chunhua had been demoted from both the PSC\u2008and the Politburo. Prior to the congress, Hu Chunhua, who is still relatively young at 59, was tipped as a possible candidate for premier by some media. Now we know that\u2019s not going to happen.<\/p>\n<p>Or did Xi use this incident to deliberately publicly humiliate Hu, the figurehead (now surely retired) of the rival <em>tuanpai<\/em> faction? We may never know the truth, but that is less important than the backlash this incident has generated, especially among young people. There is a feeling that it <em>was<\/em> a deliberate act, that Xi did this to demonstrate his total power over the CCP and society. The crises that are deepening outside the Great Hall of the People will not be so easily eliminated.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>At the Communist Party\u2019s 20th Congress dictator Xi Jinping made a clean sweep of the party-state\u2019s top organs including the once powerful Standing Committee, but does the purge translate into greater strength or stability? Vincent Kolo, chinaworker.info It was never in doubt that at October\u2019s five-yearly CCP\u2008Congress Xi Jinping would be crowned de facto Emperor. [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13,"featured_media":33565,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_exactmetrics_skip_tracking":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_active":false,"_exactmetrics_sitenote_note":"","_exactmetrics_sitenote_category":0,"tdm_status":"","tdm_grid_status":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[132,124],"tags":[37719,174,2941,915,37491],"class_list":{"0":"post-33564","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-china","8":"category-news","9":"tag-20th-congress","10":"tag-china-2","11":"tag-cold-war","12":"tag-xi-jinping","13":"tag-zero-covid"},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>China: Xi purges CCP\u2019s top ranks - China Worker<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/chinaworker.info\/en\/2022\/11\/01\/33564\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"China: Xi purges CCP\u2019s top ranks - China Worker\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"At the Communist Party\u2019s 20th Congress dictator Xi Jinping made a clean sweep of the party-state\u2019s top organs including the once powerful Standing Committee, but does the purge translate into greater strength or stability? 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Vincent Kolo, chinaworker.info It was never in doubt that at October\u2019s five-yearly CCP\u2008Congress Xi Jinping would be crowned de facto Emperor. 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