The Manila Times

China drowns out critics of lifetime Xi presidency

- AFP

BEIJING: China’s propaganda machine kicked into overdrive on Tuesday to defend the Communist Party’s move to scrap term limits for President Xi Jinping as critics - sorship attempts.

The country has shocked many observers by proposing a constituti­onal amendment to end the twoterm limit for presidents, giving Xi a clear path to rule the world’s second largest economy for life.

The rubber- stamp National People’s Congress (NPC) is certain to endorse the move next week, meaning that Xi—already China’s most powerful leader in decades— can stay as president beyond 2023.

Li Datong, a former editor at the state-run posted a draft letter urging legislator­s to vote against the move— which would abolish term limits set in 1982 under Deng Xiaoping to prevent a return to the decades of chaos under Mao Zedong.

“It was the highest and most effective legal restrictio­n meant to prevent autocracy or putting individual­s above the party and the state,” said the letter. It was not sent to legislator­s but shared with hundreds of people in a private group on China’s WeChat phone messaging app.

“Lifting the term limits of national leaders will be ridiculed by civilized nations all over the world and also sow the seeds of chaos for China,” said the text posted on Monday.

WeChat users trying to share screenshot­s of the letter saw their posts blocked.

Censors have scrambled to delete all dissenting comments on social media—even the word “disagree” is blocked—but users of the Twitter-like Weibo website kept speaking out Tuesday, two days after the party Central Committee announceme­nt.

“So pathetic, we have 1.3 billion people, no one can resist,” wrote one user.

Another lamented the lack of political reform: “I once believed that I could see a president elected by one man, one vote in my lifetime.”

Scores of terms have been blocked, according to a list of dozens of words compiled by US-based internet tracker China Digital Times—including “my emperor,” “ascend the throne,” “I oppose,” “lifelong,” and “Winnie the Pooh”—the portly cartoon bear to which Xi has been compared.

‘Happier lives’

The NPC, at its annual full session starting on Monday, will also for presidenti­al term for Xi, who is Communist Party chief and head of the armed forces in addition to being head of state.

Legislator­s will add his eponymous political philosophy to the state constituti­on.

State media defended the amendment in editorials that lavished praise on the communist party’s overall leadership. The English- language

said the lifting of the presidenti­al term limit “has been necessitat­ed by the need to perfect the Party and the State leadership system.”

The party has always proposed amendments that “have injected new ideas and concepts about where the country will go and how it will achieve its goal of rejuvenati­on and ensure people live happier lives,” it said.

a nationalis­t tabloid, was even more profuse in its praise of the amendment in an editorial entitled “Constituti­on change responds to new era.”

Since Xi took power, it wrote, “the new ruling team has not just been muddling along under the leadership of General Secretary Xi Jinping. Instead, it quickly started to deepen reforms in a compre

The newspaper took a shot at the political systems of the United States and Europe.

“It has shaped and affected quite a few Chinese people’s mindsets. But some key parts of the Western value system are collapsing. Democracy, which has been explored and practiced by Western societies for hundreds of years, is ulcerating,” it said.

“China cannot stop and take a break... our country must not be disturbed by the outside world or lose our confidence as the West grows increasing­ly vigilant toward China.”

The administra­tion of President Donald Trump, who has called Xi a friend but regularly clashes with Beijing over trade, had a guarded reaction to the Communist Party’s move.

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