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WSWS : News
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: China
Factional conflict as Beijing prepares for major leadership
change
By John Chan and James Conachy
3 May 2002
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At the 16th Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in
September, a sweeping change is expected in the public face of
the Chinese government. The current CCP secretary-general and
president of China, Jiang Zemin, along with most of the other
main leaders of the past decadethe so-called third
generation after Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaopingare constitutionally
barred from standing for re-election as they are over 70 years
old.
Jiang, at 75, must step down from the post of party general-secretary
at the upcoming conference and his term in the presidency ends
at the convening of Chinas legislature, the National Peoples
Congress (NPC), in March 2003. Four other members of the seven-member
Central Committee Politburo Standing Committee are also retiring.
These include the 72-year-old chairman of the NPC, Li Peng, and
73-year-old premier Zhu Rongji, the head of the executive branch
of government. In all, 12 of the 22 members of the Central Committee
Politburo are retiring. Dozens of senior political, bureaucratic
and military functionaries are also departing during the year.
Preparations for the changes have been underway since the last
party congress in 1997 and the leadership is keen for a smooth
transition. Since the beginning of the year, Beijing has put considerable
effort into building up the image of the fourth generation
leaders, in particular Vice President Hu Jintao who is slated
to succeed Jiang as president. Hu made a high-profile trip to
a series of European countries last November and is currently
in the United States where he has met with Bush and senior American
officials.
Despite the attempts to present a united front, however, there
are a number of signs that the leadership changes are being accompanied
by a sharp factional struggle within the CCP over the policy direction
to be pursued. Political figures connected to Hu Jintao are calling
for limited political reforms as a means of defusing the growing
unrest throughout China over rising unemployment and widening
social polarisation. They have been opposed by a layer connected
with the military apparatusrepresented by NPC chairman Li
Pengwho are insisting the state apparatus adhere to its
traditional policies of repression and tight social control.
Both Li Peng and Jiang Zemin owe their positions in the 1990s
to their role in the events of May-June 1989. Confronted with
a working class movement against both its dictatorial methods
and the social inequality caused by its pro-capitalist policies,
the Stalinist regime under Deng Xiaoping unleashed brutal police-state
repression. Jiang Zemin, a sycophantic functionary, was installed
as party general-secretary to replace Zhao Ziyang, who was advocating
concessions in order to end the student occupation of Tiananmen
Square. Li Peng, then the Premier, supported Deng and gave the
official order for troops to move into Beijing and carry out the
massacre.
The events of 1989 were crucial for the free market agenda
that was ruthlessly pushed through by the entire CCP leadership
in the subsequent decade. The massacre in Tiananmen Square was
a sign to international investors that Beijing would take whatever
measures were necessary to suppress oppositionand billions
of dollars flooded into the country.
Jiang took the post of president in 1993, while Li took the
NPC chair in order to allow Zhu Rongji to become premier in 1998.
The expectation in China had been that upon Lis and Jiangs
official retirement, they would continue to wield the real power
behind-the-scenes by exerting ongoing influence over Chinas
military. Li Peng has numerous factional connections with leading
personnel in the security forces. Jiang Zemin heads the Central
Military Commission, the high command of the Peoples Liberation
Army.
However, far from guaranteed influence after his retirement,
Li Peng is facing a string of accusations of corruption and nepotism.
Last November, the Securities Market Weekly, a major Chinese
financial journal linked to the government, publicly accused Li
Pengs wife and his son Li Xiaopeng of abuse of power stemming
from their management of the state-controlled power corporation,
Huaneng International Power Development. While the magazine withdrew
the article and apologised, the attack on Li Pengs family
did not stop. In early January, an interview by Lis wife,
in which she denied any wrongdoing, was followed within days by
a column in the official newspaper of the Young Communist Leaguea
powerbase of heir-apparent Hu Jintaodenouncing the
greedy wives of officials who used their husbands
positions for commercial gain.
Ten days later, a group of 100 wealthy Chinese investors demonstrated
in Beijing and accused authorities of closing down an investigation
into the bankruptcy of a brokerage firm in order to protect Li
Pengs eldest son, Li Xiaoyong, a senior official in the
Peoples Armed Police. The investors allege Li Xiaoyong,
on behalf of a police investment company he directed, took $US24
million from the firm before it collapsed, while the other investors
lost everything. Unlike most other protests, no attempt was made
to stop it, indicating high-level support.
The effort to discredit Li Peng has not been confined to corruption
allegations. Internationally, Mirror Books has published two books
in Chinese purporting to be unofficial records of internal discussions
within the Beijing regime. The first, the Tiananmen Papers,
portrays Li as baying for blood in 1989. At the same time, it
presents Zhao Ziyang, the party general-secretary who was removed
from his position in May 1989 and replaced with Jiang Zemin, as
sympathetic to the demands of the student movement.
The second book, Zhu Rongji in 1999, published last
October, presents Zhu Rongji as opposing the crackdown on the
Falun Gong religious movement. By contrast, Li Peng is portrayed
as brutal and stupid, while Jiang Zemin is depicted as a weak
and indecisive leader, intimidated by Li and his factional supporters.
The editor of the English translation, Andrew Nathan of Columbia
University, told the New York Times: The materials
were provided by people who care about Zhu and dont want
him to go off the stage with the misapprehension lying around
that he was part and parcel of everything Jiang did.
Concerns over anti-government unrest
The scandal and innuendo swirling around Li Peng, and the associated
denigration of Jiangs leadership, is aimed at undermining
their ability to influence both the composition of the new leadership
and the future actions of the government. It has surfaced at the
same time as an increasingly open discussion within ruling circles
over the dangers of another anti-government upsurge. Last June,
a report by the CCPs Central Committee Organisation Departmentwhich
is headed by Zeng Qinghong, a close fourth generation
associate of Jiang Zeminwarned that unrest was at dangerous
levels among industrial workers and the peasantry.
The last decade of free market restructuring has produced deep
class divisions in China, as well as transforming the economy.
A thin business elite, closely connected to the CCP apparatus
and transnational corporate giants, has accumulated enormous wealth,
and a prosperous middle class has developed in the major cities
and towns. At the same time, however, the impact on the mass of
the Chinese population has been dislocation and growing hardship.
In the last five years alone, at least 40 million workers have
been laid-off from state-owned enterprises that have been privatised
or bankrupted. Unemployment is endemic in the former industrial
centers of northern and central China. The market has caused living
standards to plummet in rural areas and tens of millions of peasants
have been forced to leave the countryside. Large numbers have
migrated to the booming export-orientated cities where they endure
low pay, brutal working conditions, a lack of health and education
services, and inadequate housing. Demonstrations, protests and
other signs of opposition are on the rise.
Of growing alarm in Beijing is the increasing unrest in rural
areas over inequality, falling living standards, high taxes and
official corruption. In 1989, the protest movement was largely
confined to the major cities. The rural areas remained, for the
most part, supportive of the government. Significant sections
of the peasantry still held illusions in the CCP due to the vast
and generally beneficial changes in agrarian relations following
the 1949 revolution. After military units recruited in urban areas
failed to quell the unrest in Beijing, Deng Xiaoping was still
able to rely on army detachments from more rural provinces to
suppress the working class. A decade on, rural China is in ferment
and the reduction of agricultural tariffs as part of Chinas
entry into the World Trade Organisation (WTO) is expected to force
another 20 million small peasant farmers off the land.
Amidst the mounting social instability, the primary question
preoccupying the political elite is how to develop a social base
that will actively support the policies of free market. The answer
being given by the wing around Hu Jintao is that CCP must openly
base itself on the new upper, and largely urban, middle classes
who have benefited from the spread of capitalist relations. To
accommodate these layers, certain limited democratic reforms are
also being discussed.
One of the longest-standing spokesmen for this tendency is
Pan Yue, who is a close advisor to Hu and deputy director of the
governments Economic Restructuring Office. In 1991, he authored
a widely read article Chinas practical response and
strategic choices following the sudden changes in the USSR.
He called for the CCP to adopt a social democratic perspective,
based upon the support of the middle-income class
as the CCPs legitimacy is precarious. He said:
The partys claim that it should rule because it won
the revolution is no longer adequate: time has passed and popular
support has declined.
Ten years ago, he suggested a political system that, while
preserving the power of the CCP, allowed other social groups
to participate in the distribution of national wealth and
resources by having multiple-candidate elections for official
posts. The only alternative to reform at the top,
he warned, was a violent revolution from below.
Among fourth generation leaders, such ideas now
have a considerable following. The most likely next premier, Wen
Jiabao, was an ally of Zhao Ziyang in 1989 and accompanied him
when he visited Tiananmen Square to try to reach a deal with protesting
students. After the massacre, Wen Jiabao was sidelined until 1999,
when he was re-installed into senior economic posts by Zhu Rongji.
Politically, he is considered one of the main advocates of reform
within the CCP.
More significantly, the Central Party School, which is headed
by Hu Jintao, has conducted studies of the European social democratic
parties as a possible model for the CCP. Last year Hu personally
showed considerable interest in the German Social Democratic Party.
Li Ruihuan, the only member of the present Standing Committee,
apart from Hu, who will remain in the inner leadership, has pushed
for a broader involvement of non-party members in the countrys
top bodies. He is expected to replace Li Peng as National Peoples
Congress chairman.
The significance of political reform was expressed
most clearly in a proposal last July by Jiang Zemin to change
the party constitution to enable business owners to become members.
As Pan Yue bluntly explained to the Far East Economic Review
at the time: It is the technologists and entrepreneurs
who represent the most advanced productive forces, not common
staff and workers. The party must become the representative of
their development needs.
The hardline opposition
Ever since it tore itself away from its roots in the Chinese
working class in the 1920s, the CCP has been based on sections
of the peasantry, which has made up the bulk of the army. Opposition
to the political reform proposed by Hu and others
has been centred on sections of the military and party bureaucracy,
who, like Li Peng, were directly involved in suppressing the 1989
movement.
Last August a group of retired party leaders, headed by the
former propaganda boss Deng Liqun, issued an open letter to the
party attacking Jiang Zemin. Why didnt Jiangs
speech tackle the gap between rich and poor, instead of speaking
for the wealthy? Why doesnt he speak for the biggest losers,
such as the workers and peasants, instead of acting as a spokesman
for the biggest winners, the private bosses who account for 0.3
percent of the population? it declared.
The concern of these hard-liners is not the plight
of the working class or peasantry. They all fully supported Beijings
free market agenda and reaped their share of the benefits. Their
stance reflects fears that the CCP has lost its legitimacy in
the eyes of masses of people and could face protest movements
it cannot control. While the main fourth generation
leaders are enthusiastic advocates of the WTO and the further
opening of China, their critics such as Deng Liqun are calling
instead for slower economic restructuring and a greater concentration
on appeasing the grievances of the peasantry.
Neither of the leadership factions represent the interests
of workers or the impoverished urban and rural masses. Whatever
their differences, both wings recognise the need to bolster the
military, which has always been the regimes main prop. Both
the reformers and hard-liners share an
ingrained hostility toward the working class and would rapidly
come together against any challenge from belowas in fact
took place in May-June 1989.
See Also:
Chinese think-tank
warns of growing unrest over social inequality
[15 June 2001]
Beijing's WTO concessions
signal a new stage in China's capitalist restructuring
[28 June 2000]
Thousands of officials
punished in China's anti-corruption purge
[1 February 2000]
Ten years since the
Tiananmen Square massacre
Political lessons for the working class
[4 June 1999]
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