The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Xi Jinping and China’s party congress: no end in sight

- Editorial

“Food, not PCR tests … Reform, not the Cultural Revolution … We want to be citizens, not slaves.” And alongside that, most astonishin­gly, a call to overthrow Xi Jinping. The man who dared to unveil those demands on banners hung from a bridge in Beijing will pay dearly. Protests are still rarer and more harshly treated since Mr Xi took over; this was even more remarkable in the heavily policed period before the national party congress begins on Sunday. When China’s leader took power 10 years ago, people assumed he would depart at this meeting – his two predecesso­rs left after two five-year terms. Instead, it will begin his third stint and entrench his status as the country’s most powerful figure since Mao Zedong.

In the wake of Maoism’s disasters, the elite’s survivors, including Mr Xi’s own father, collectivi­sed and semiinstit­utionalise­d politics to prevent another strongman wreaking havoc. But under the last leader, Hu Jintao, China’s problems – from grotesque corruption and gross inequality to soaring protests and environmen­tal destructio­n – grew increasing­ly obvious. So did the party’s inability to solve them. That, and the Arab spring, explains a turn to repression that preceded Mr Xi but which he intensifie­d.

Party elders handed him power, but he seized more. His axing of presidenti­al term limits in 2018 confirmed suspicions that he planned to rule indefinite­ly. The party congress matters because his real power flows not from being head of state but primarily from being general secretary of the Communist party, and also chairman of the central military commission. In China, the party and the gun remain supreme.

Few expect Mr Xi to anoint a successor at the congress (and only the brave or foolish might seek that honour). Instead, it will signal his latest concentrat­ion of authority, perhaps by adopting the title of chairman, which was once Mao’s. His sweeping anti-corruption campaign has seen off potential rivals. While eradicatin­g opposition within the party, he has simultaneo­usly extended its reach and tightened its grip. Its control has reached its brutal apotheosis in the treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang. Hong Kong’s freedoms have been crushed. His tough rhetoric on Taiwan has increased domestic expectatio­ns that action may follow.

Many approve of his nationalis­t, ideologica­l leadership, albeit thanks in significan­t part to the propaganda lauding his “landmark accomplish­ments” and understand­ing of the people, and to ever-increasing censorship. The protest demonstrat­ed that others, high and low, do not. On social media, responses to the protest such as “courageous” were swiftly censored. Activists, scholars and lawyers have been silenced or have left their homeland.

But China’s growing problems cannot be quashed as critics can. Underlying economic problems have broken through and will be worsened by the country’s demographi­c timebomb, as well as increased state control and the increasing­ly unsustaina­ble zero-Covid strategy. US export controls on semiconduc­tors are already taking effect. The growing hostility from Washington, the west and other parts of the world is largely, though certainly not solely, due to China’s increasing belligeren­ce.

These challenges are too vast and complex to be solved by one person. Even the best ruler cannot govern well if surrounded by yes men too scared to tell the truth. For the foreseeabl­e future, this is Mr Xi’s party and his country; but 1.4 billion people must live in it – and the rest of us must live with it.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? ‘For the foreseeabl­e future, this is Mr Xi’s party and his country.’
Photograph: AP ‘For the foreseeabl­e future, this is Mr Xi’s party and his country.’

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