Top Marx — Party adds to Xi’s list of titles
Marx, Deng . . . Xi?
To the Chinese President’s growing array of titles, the ruling Communi st Party says Xi Jinping can add important Marxist thinker.
The party on Thursday praised Xi’s contribution to ideology, adding to intense propaganda promoting his personal image as Xi begins a second five- year term as leader.
Xi, 64, has emerged as the most powerful leader since Mao Zedong in the 1970s.
He has taken control of an unusually wide range of political, economic and other functions, a break with the past two decades of collective leadership.
His image dominates official propaganda, which has prompted suggestions Xi is trying to build a cult of personality, evoking memories of the upheaval of the 1960s and 70s. Party spokespeople reject such talk, insisting Xi is the core of its sevenmember Standing Committee, not a lone strongman.
Xi’s name and a political theory attributed to him were added to the party constitution this week, making him only the third Chinese leader cited by name after Mao and Deng Xiaoping, who launched economic reform in 1979. A reference to Deng Xiaoping Theory, or “socialism with Chinese characteristics,” was added only after the late leader’s death.
A party spokesman said Xi’s status was justified due to his “significant contribution“to ideology.
“Using the names of party leaders for theory or guiding ideology is common practice in the international communist movement. For example, Marxism, Leninism, or our country has Mao Zedong Thought or Deng Xiaoping Theory,” said spokesman Wang Xiaohui at a televised news con- ference on Thursday following the close of the Communist Party Congress, an event held every five years.
“Xi Jinping’s ‘ socialism with Chinese characteristics in a new era’ is the crystallisation of the wisdom of the party and the masses,” said Wang.
“He made a significant contribution to the creation of this theory,” said Wang. “So use of his name on this theory is deserved.”
On Thursday, Xi’s face was splashed across the covers of Chinese magazines, while newspapers showed him with other members of the new Standing Committee appointed Wednesday.
“The Xi Jinping Era,” said the headline on Vista magazine, published by the ruling party newspaper in the Ningxia region in the northwest.
Political phrases associated with Xi’s t wo most recent predecessors — Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao — were added to the party constitution but not their names.
Xi serves as party leader, President of China and Commander- in- Chief of the military, as well as leader of party bodies in charge of economic reform, national security, internet security, foreign affairs and financial regulation.
Xi has steadily tightened central control over the party and led a marathon anti- corruption crackdown that has snared potential rivals and successors.