Top Chinese officials, especially the Party elders, have made compromises within the Party in a bid to sustain its totalitarian rule, according to experts.
The frequent personnel changes within Xi Jinping’s faction indicate a tacit balancing act employed by the top echelons to alleviate internal dissatisfaction with the Chinese leader’s governance, according to analysts.
Within two weeks, from the end of September to early October, at least three confidants of Xi, including one military disciplinary official, were removed from their key positions or placed under investigation.
Resorting to Party Elders Again
On Sept. 30, at the high-ranking CCP meeting to mark the 75th anniversary of the founding of communist China, two former leaders—Wen Jiabao and Li Ruihuan—sat to the immediate left and right of Xi, which attracted many political interpretations.
In his speech, Xi expressed gratitude “to the past leaders of the older generation.” This is a rare move from the regime’s top helmsman.
After a decade, Xi has come to another crossroads.
“The economy is in shambles, and Xi has no way out. Therefore, he has to appease the patriarchs and draw on their strength,” Wang said.
Wang added that Xi’s extreme left-leaning policies and one-man dictatorship have displeased the Party’s most powerful political families that monopolize state assets—patriarchs within are potentially influential.
Shi Shan, a China expert and contributor to The Epoch Times, said that the CCP system determines that the patriarchs become the spokesmen and mainstays in power-sharing, so their appearance at a significant event suggests unusual political signals.
In Shi’s view, Xi faces a partial decentralization of power.
“It is likely that certain tacit agreements and compromises are reached within this particular elite group,” he said.
Xi’s Weakening Power
All of the members of Xi’s camp who had job changes are younger than 65, which is around the peak years of political careers in China. They used to work in areas related to implementing Xi’s anti-corruption campaign.
On Sept. 30, Chen Guoqiang, 61, a former disciplinary supervisor in the Central Committee and Central Military Committee, was reassigned to the National University of Defence Technology.
Chen played a crucial role in Xi’s fight against his political rivals. Chen is the “key executor” behind major military purges, according to commentator Xiang Yang.
Xi’s loss of confidants also occurred in the business sector.
The 58-year-old Cao had just transferred to the company in early 2023. He previously served as the deputy director of the cadre division of the Organization Department, a supervisor body overseeing Party staffing positions.
According to Chen, all those dynamics won’t be what Xi is willing to see, but he might not have been able to prevent them from unfolding for some reason. Since the Third Plenary Session of the 20th Central Committee in July, rumors surfaced that Xi had suffered a stroke or was seriously ill. Opponents may view this as an opportunity to subdue Xi’s power by removing his cronies, Chen said.
The power struggle within the Party has resulted in political instability, said Wang. China may enter a stage where sudden changes could happen at any time because “the ruling party is trapped in double-fold fatal crises—Xi’s leadership and the CCP’s survival,” he said.
“Both cannot be easily mitigated.”
Xin Ning contributed to this report.
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