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Signs of leadership infighting ahead of Chinese Communist
Party congress
By John Chan
25 September 2007
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Factional manoeuvring appears to be intensifying ahead of the
17th national congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) due
to begin on October 15. The gathering of more than 2,200 delegates,
which occurs every five years, will elect new members to the central
leadership under general secretary Hu Jintao, who is also the
countrys president and chairman of the powerful Central
Military Commission.
Hu took over as party leader from former president Jiang Zemin
at the previous congress in 2002, but the CCPs powerful
Politburo continued to be dominated by Jiangs supporters,
particularly based in Shanghai. Five years later, Hu and his backers
want to consolidate their grip over the state apparatus and army.
This factional struggle is not simply a change of personnel, but
reflects sharp tactical differences within the Stalinist bureaucracy
over economic policy and political direction.
Prior to his departure for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) forum in Sydney in early September, Hu replaced five key
ministers, including Xu Yongyue, who had been minister of state
security for a decade. Others removed included finance minister
Jin Renqing, personnel minister Zhang Bolin and Zhang Yunchuan,
minister in charge of the state commission of science, technology
and national defence industry. Li Zhilun, who was in charge of
the supervision ministry, died recently. The editor of the official
Xinhua news agency was also replaced.
Most of these posts are important for control over the party
and government. The minister of state security runs the countrys
political police who are responsible for suppressing continuing
protests and political opposition groups as well as engaging in
international espionage. The supervision and personnel ministries
oversee the huge bureaucratic apparatus that manages every level
of government. The finance ministry controls the purse strings
and Jin Renqings departure, amid rumours of scandal, is
one more sign of behind-the-scenes factional intrigue.
Jiang reluctantly handed over to Hu in 2002. Hu replace Jiang
as president in 2003 but only took over the key position of chairman
of the Central Military Commission in September 2004 after an
internal tussle. The immediate issue at stake was the 1989 Tiananmen
Square massacre in which troops killed hundreds, if not thousands,
of protesting Beijing workers and students. Jiang, who came to
power in 1989, was bitterly opposed to any reinterpretation of
the official stance toward the protesters as a counter-revolutionary
rebellion. He and his supporters were not only concerned
for their own reputations but that any easing might open the door
for social unrest.
As longstanding members of the Stalinist regime, Hu and members
of his Communist Youth League faction were not opposed
in principle to the use of violent repression. In the subsequent
five years, Hu has not hesitated to authorise the use of police
violence to break up protests, and maintains blanket censorship
over the media, the Internet and all forms of political dissent.
However, he advocates a form of mild political liberalisation
as a means of building a political base among Chinas emerging
middle class and to forestall a social explosion.
A critical issue at the upcoming congress will be the composition
of the CCPs supreme nine-member Politburo Standing Committee.
When he was installed in 2002, Hus only close ally was Premier
Wen Jiabaothe others were Jiangs protégés.
Already there is speculation that Hu will substantially alter
the committees make-up. A list obtained last month by the
Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy
indicated that only four of the nine would keep their positionsHu
and Wen along with Wu Bangguo and Zeng Qinghong.
Wu Bangguo is number two in the party hierarchy and chairman
of the Standing Committee of the National Peoples Congress (NPC).
While he comes from Jiangs stronghold in the CCP apparatus
in Shanghai, Wu appears to have accommodated to Hu over the past
five years. Vice President Zeng Qinghong, who controls the partys
personnel appointment and organisation, is also strongly connected
to the Shanghai clique, but seems to have been playing a conciliatory
role, smoothing the transition from Jiang to Hu. He has a strong
base among the children of the senior CCP leaders, known in China
simply as the princes.
The five being replaced are all Jiangs supporters. Vice
Premier Huang Ju died suddenly in June. Luo Gan, the partys
law and order man, and Wu Guangzheng, in charge of
party discipline, are stepping down due to age. With
scandals swirling in the background, Li Changchun and Jia Qinglin,
who at 63 and 67 respectively are both comparatively young by
CCP standards, will step down for health reasons or
corruption allegations.
Among their probable replacements, several are significant.
Li Keqiang is just 52, a leading figure of the Communist
Youth League faction and the party boss of northeastern
Liaoning province. He is the most likely heir apparent to Hu,
who has to step down at the next congress in 2012. Two of the
likely new figures, Zhang Dejiang, the provincial party secretary
of Guangdong, and Zhou Youngkang, the minister of public security,
are believed to have close ties to Jiang, ensuring the Shanghai
clique retains a degree of influence.
Factional divisions
The most significant sign of Jiangs waning influence
was the eruption of a major corruption scandal last year, which
centred on the Shanghai party organisation. Shanghai party boss
Chen Liangyu was finally dismissed last September and charged
with lending 3.2 billion yuan (about $US400 million) in pension
funds to illegal entrepreneurs. A number of other
Shanghai officials and businessmen were also investigated or detained
over the scandal. Hu took the opportunity to place one of his
own supporters, Han Zheng, in charge of the Shanghai party machine.
Behind the factional brawling were sharp differences over economic
policy. Concerned at rising unemployment, Jiang Zemin encouraged
unfettered economic growth in the 1990s, leading to a wave of
speculation and profiteering. Hu, however, sought to rein in the
growing dangers of overcapacity, inflation and speculative bubbles
in property and shares by imposing microeconomic controls.
In Shanghai, one of the centres of free-wheeling capitalism, local
party bosses and businesses resisted. Hu used the scandal not
only to install his own loyalists but also as a sharp warning
to other opponents.
More fundamentally, the differences over economic policy are
motivated by a shared fear over the dangers of a social and political
explosion in China. None of the social contradictions that produced
the 1989 protests has been resolved. Chinas emergence as
a vast global sweatshop has created a far larger working class
than in 1980s, while the penetration of the market relations into
rural areas has deepened social divisions among the peasantry.
Beijings user-pay reforms in education, healthcare
and housing have produced widespread hardship and anger. Child
labour, prostitution, official corruption and other social evils
such as industrial accidents and ecological disasters are fuelling
widespread hostility to the Beijing bureaucracy.
Reflecting concerns in international financial circles, Londons
Business magazine of September 5 cited Citigroups
chief Asian economist Huang Yiping who warned either the
[Chinese] authorities take more decisive action or something blows
up. The magazine commented: If the latter happens,
the world will feel the shock waves (far more than China felt
the effects of the recent Western market wobble). It is in all
our interests that President Hu and Prime Minister Wen emerge
strengthened from their October Congressand then, of course,
proceed to do the right things.
Hus response to mounting social tensions has been to
approve a limited ideological debate in recent months over political
reform. This catchword has nothing to do with granting even
basic democratic rights, but is aimed at wooing layers of the
middle class and liberal intelligentsia, as a substitute for the
CCP bureaucracys traditional social base among sections
of the peasantry. A key element of the debate is a
return to the issue of the Tiananmen Square massacre.
In July, former vice premier Tian Jiyuan wrote a tribute in
a journal Yanhuang Chunqiu to late CCP general secretary
Zhao Ziyangwho supported the students demands of political
reform in 1989 and was placed under house arrest until his
death in 2005. Tian compared favourably Zhaos moral standing
to the rampant corruption among the CCP cadres today. More controversial
was the journals cover story, which bluntly stated democratic
reform had severely regressed since the Tiananmen
events.
The author, Wu Min of the CCPs party school in Shanxi,
criticised the partys excessive concentration of power
as the cause of official corruption and deepening social tensions.
Checks and balances of power are alarmingly lacking... the
status quo should not be continued anymore. The longer fundamental,
substantial political reforms are delayed, the more likely unpredictable
and insurmountable social unrest and political crises are going
to occur. He warned the CCP could face a catastrophic downfall
similar to that of the Soviet Communist Party in 1991 or the Kuomintang
dictatorship in 1949.
The articles provoked a bitter attack by a group of 17 former
senior officials in an open letter to President Hu. Citing the
recent slave labour scandal in the brick industry, they argued
that the purpose of so-called political reform was
to officially embrace capitalist relations and abandon the CCPs
claim to be socialist. Such a policy would produce
a Chinese Boris Yeltsin who would ruin the Chinese society like
the dissolution of former USSR, they warned. Were
going down an evil road. The whole country is at an almost perilous
moment.
The letter called for the expulsion of 2.8 million private
capitalists from the CCP and the repeal of the countrys
first private property law, passed this year. Far from representing
the interests of the working class and the rural poor, these veteran
Stalinists are defending layers of the bureaucratic apparatus
whose privileges and power were bound up with the system of state-owned
enterprises. They want to maintain the lie that China is somehow
socialist in order to defuse mounting social tensions.
Even this limited discussion could not be tolerated. Hu ignored
the appeal of the 17 and promptly shut down their website.
Whatever their tactical differences, all CCP factions are united
in opposition to any danger to political stability. Significantly
on August 1, Hu and Jiang appeared on the same platform together
for the first time since 2004 to mark the 80th anniversary of
Peoples Liberation Army (PLA). In his speech at the Great Hall
of the People, Hu referred on no less than 15 occasions to the
loyalty of the PLA to the party centre. Jiang followed in kind.
It was a very public statement that despite their disagreements
both of the leading bureaucrats recognise that their Stalinist
regime rests on the tools of repression, not popular support.
The same united front will also be evident at next months
congress, even as the backroom factional brawling continues over
power and privileges.
See Also:
Shanghai pension scandal:
a factional struggle erupts in China's leadership
[8 September 2006]
The death of China's
"red capitalist" and the 1949 revolution
[29 November 2005]
Behind the military
leadership changeover in China
[25 October 2004]
Chinese Communist
Party to declare itself open to the capitalist elite
[13 November 2002]
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