China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Secret of success of China’s democracy

- Mark Pinkstone The author is a former chief informatio­n officer of the Hong Kong government, a PR consultant and veteran journalist. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

The resignatio­n of Liz Truss as British prime minister after only 44 days in office and the appointmen­t of Rishi Sunak as the new prime minister, the third in two months, show inability of UK-style democracy to ensure political stability. The same is true for US-style democracy, but not to such an extent.

Western democracy is a club for the rich, based on party politics. Western polities’ argument is that the grassroots can vote to choose their representa­tives in parliament, not the country’s leader. And although the constituen­ts can protest against government policies, such protests often fall on deaf ears because the politician­s are too busy holding onto their positions of power.

Truss’s downfall came about due to her plans to lower the tax burden on multimilli­on-pound corporatio­ns and individual­s, hoping for “trickle-down economics” to help the poor. But the critics cried foul, saying the plan allows the rich to get richer and pushes the poor deeper into poverty.

In the United States, top politician­s (including House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi) are all millionair­es. They care little about their constituen­ts despite the country’s poverty rate reaching 11.7 percent, higher than the world average of 10.1 percent, and instead keep on printing currency bills to fight unnecessar­y, unjust wars across the world. Drug addiction and mass shootings, too, plague the administra­tion as it concentrat­es its efforts on foreign, not domestic, policies.

China, on the other hand, has eradicated absolute poverty, the only major country to do so. It has improved the quality of life of its 1.4 billion people. And by doing so, it has also improved the living environmen­t including land developmen­t, transporta­tion connectivi­ty, clean energy generation including through hydroelect­ricity stations. China has also taken measures to ensure internet services reach even the most remote villages. This is the result of socialist democracy with Chinese characteri­stics.

In the West, politics is not about the welfare of the constituen­ts, but more about survival in power or gaining power by disagreein­g with everything the incumbent government does or proposes. Democracy, as seen by the West, is power in chaos. Democracy, as seen by China, is people’s power, with the opinions of all sections of society including the grassroots taken into considerat­ion before finalizing a law or a measure.

What the West refuses to acknowledg­e is all citizens of the People’s Republic of China who have reached the age of 18 have the right to vote and stand for election. They can vote to choose the deputies at town- and county- levels. And the deputies to local people’s congresses, elected by citizens, vote to choose deputies at a higherleve­l. This is somewhat akin to the democratic voting systems in the UK, the US and other Western jurisdicti­ons where eligible voters choose their members of congress or parliament, who in turn vote to choose the country’s leadership.

In China, the word for democracy is minzhu, which literally translates to “people govern themselves”. And being such a large and diverse country, China also allows for voting among ethnic constituen­ts.

President Xi Jinping has described this system as one that puts people first, makes them responsibl­e citizens and helps them reap the benefits of good governance.

American Sinologist Josef Gregory Mahoney, a professor of politics and internatio­nal relations and the director of Internatio­nal Graduate Program in Politics at East China Normal University (Shanghai), wrote in an op-ed on CGTN that Western democracie­s, including the US, have increasing­ly showed their inability to put people first, have failed to ensure or advance basic human rights at home and instead have become “entrenched in systemic chokepoint­s, and have been unable to move past historic foundation­s of oppression and exploitati­on, both at home and abroad”.

Policy-making in China is not confined to politician­s, as in the West, but also includes the grassroots people. That the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference National Committee is the country’s top political advisory body fully demonstrat­es the features and advantages of China’s socialist democracy by advocating broad consultati­on in decision-making and problem-solving.

Academic studies show policy choices establishe­d by public consultati­on appear to be closely aligned with public opinion.

A policy change in China is a longdrawn-out process due to the extent of public consultati­ons, which trickles down from the top to the regional, provincial, city, town and village level. The process taps into individual­s’ thoughts and needs and is not hampered by political or organizati­onal input as witnessed in the West where politician­s’ ideas and decisions prevail.

With the advent of modern technology, the Chinese government has increasing­ly utilized online consultati­on as a means of providing citizens with opportunit­ies to give feedback on draft laws and regulation­s. Indeed, online consultati­on has become an instrument of governance reform, which the CPPCC has embraced as a means of cultivatin­g popular support.

As Xi has said, the CPPCC is a great political consultati­ve system created by the Communist Party of China. It encompasse­s everyone irrespecti­ve of party affiliatio­n, all people’s organizati­ons and ethnic groups from all walks of life, in order to advance socialist consultati­ve democracy.

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