Deccan Chronicle

XI LIKELY TO BE PRESIDENT FOREVER

Communist Party proposes to remove presidenti­al term

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Beijing, Feb. 25: In an unpreceden­ted move, China’s ruling Communist Party on Sunday prepared the ground for President Xi Jinping to stay in power indefinite­ly after the end of his second term in 2022 as it proposed to remove presidenti­al term limits from the party’s Constituti­on.

The CPC Central Committee proposed removing the clause that the President and Vice-President “shall serve no more than two consecutiv­e terms” from the country’s Constituti­on, staterun Xinhua news agency reported on Sunday. The move would give 64-yearold Xi, one of the most powerful leader in China, a limitless tenure.

Beijing, Feb. 25: China’s ruling Communist Party has proposed scrapping term limits for the country’s president, the official news agency said on Sunday, appearing to lay the groundwork for party leader Xi Jinping to rule as president beyond 2023.

The party’s Central Committee proposed to remove from the constituti­on the expression that China's president and vice president “shall serve no more than two consecutiv­e terms,” the Xinhua said.

“Xi Jinping has finally achieved his ultimate goal when he first embarked on Chinese politics - that is to be the Mao Zedong of the 21st century,” said Willy Lam, a political analyst at the Chinese University in Hong Kong.

Xi, 64, cemented his status as the most powerful Chinese leader since Mao in the 1970s at last year's twice-a-decade Communist Party congress, where his name and a political theory attributed to him were added to the party constituti­on as he was given a second five-year term as general secretary.

It was the latest move by the party signaling Xi's willingnes­s to break with tradition and centralise power under him. Xi has taken control of an unusually wide range of political, economic and other functions, a break with the past two decades of collective leadership.

“What is happening is potentiall­y very dangerous because the reason why Mao Zedong made one mistake after another was because China at the time was a one-man show,” Lam said. “For Xi Jinping, whatever he says is the law. There are no longer any checks and balances.” Xi is coming to the end of his first five-year term as president and is set to be appointed to his second term at an annual meeting of the rubber-stamp parliament that starts March 5. The proposal to end term limits will likely be approved at that meeting.

Term limits on officehold­ers have been in place since they were included in the 1982 constituti­on, when lifetime tenure was abolished.

Political analysts said the party would likely seek to justify the proposed removal of the presidenti­al term limit by citing Xi's vision of establishi­ng a prosperous, modern society by 2050.

“The theoretica­l justificat­ion for removing tenure limits is that China requires a visionary, capable leader to see China through this multi-decade grand plan,” Lam said.

“But the other aspect of it could just be Mao Zedong-like megalomani­a; he is just convinced that he is fit to be an emperor for life,” he said.

Hu Xingdou, a Beijingbas­ed political commentato­r, said while Xi might need an extra five-year term or two to carry out his plans, the country is unlikely to return to an era of lifetime tenure for heads of state.

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Xi Jinping

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