Santa Fe New Mexican

Historic vote in China lets president rule for life

- By Christophe­r Bodeen ANDY WONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIJING — Xi Jinping, already China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, received a vastly expanded mandate Sunday as lawmakers abolished presidenti­al term limits that have been in place for more than 35 years and wrote his political philosophy into the country’s constituti­on.

In one swift vote, the rubberstam­p legislatur­e opened up the possibilit­y of Xi serving as president for life, returning China to the one-man-rule system that prevailed during the era of Mao and the emperors who came before him.

The package of constituti­onal amendments passed the nearly 3,000-member National People’s Congress almost unanimousl­y, with just two opposing votes and three abstention­s. The vote further underscore­d the total dominance of Chinese politics possessed by the 64-year-old Xi, who serves simultaneo­usly as the head of state, leader of the ruling Communist Party and commander of the powerful 1 million-member armed forces.

The move upends a system enacted by former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping in 1982 to prevent a return to the bloody excesses of a lifelong dictatorsh­ip typified by Mao’s chaotic 1966-76 Cultural Revolution.

“This marks the biggest regression in China’s legal system since the reform and opening-up era of the 1980s,” said Zhang Lifan, an independen­t Beijing-based political commentato­r.

“I’m afraid that this will all be written into our history in the future,” Zhang said.

The change is widely seen as the culminatio­n of Xi’s efforts since being appointed leader of the party in 2012 to concentrat­e power in his own hands and defy norms of collective leadership establishe­d over the past two decades. Xi has appointed himself to head bodies that oversee national security, finance, economic reform and other major initiative­s, effectivel­y sidelining the Communist Party’s No. 2 figure, Premier Li Keqiang.

In addition to scrapping the limitation that presidents can serve only two consecutiv­e terms, the amendments also inserted Xi’s personal political philosophy into the preamble of the constituti­on, along with phrasing that emphasizes the party’s leadership.

Voting among the legislatur­e’s hand-picked delegates began in the mid-afternoon, with Xi leading members of the party’s sevenmembe­r all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee in casting their ballots on a stage inside a cavernous hall. He placed his orange ballot paper in a red box bearing the official seal of state.

Rank-and-file deputies then rose to vote on the floor of the hall.

Shortly after 3:50 p.m., the results were read over the publicaddr­ess system and flashed briefly on a screen in the hall.

“The constituti­onal amendment item has passed,” the announcer declared to polite applause.

 ??  ?? Delegates applaud as Chinese President Xi Jinping walks to his seat Sunday after casting his vote for an amendment to China’s constituti­on that will abolish term limits on the presidency and enable him to rule indefinite­ly, during a plenary session of...
Delegates applaud as Chinese President Xi Jinping walks to his seat Sunday after casting his vote for an amendment to China’s constituti­on that will abolish term limits on the presidency and enable him to rule indefinite­ly, during a plenary session of...

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