The men who will be in charge of China were revealed today |
A day after former president Hu Jintao unceremoniously left before the end of the National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party, Chinese leader Xi Jinping revealed his Politburo Standing Committee which left China experts' tongues wagging.
Looking at the lineup, it's not about competence or a diversity of opinion, but fierce loyalty to Xi that trumps all.
The biggest shocker is that Premier Li Keqiang will be replaced by Li Qiang, 63, who was the Party Secretary of Shanghai.
Xi chose those most loyal to him in Politburo |
Surprisingly Li was not sacked because of his close relationship with Xi, and his influence as Party Secretary of Shanghai.
The two go way back to 2004 when Li was Xi's chief secretary in Zhejiang province, and Xi promoted him to governor of the province when Xi became President in 2013.
It's quite concerning that Li will be in charge of the country's economy, but with zero-Covid still in force, perhaps he won't be expected to meet unrealistic targets.
Others in the lineup: Zhao Leji, Wang Huning, Cai Qi, Ding Xuexiang, and Li Xi.
Zhao is head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, reporting on several officials for corruption over the years. When he was 42 years old, he was the youngest provincial governor when he was governor of Qinghai.
Shanghai's lockdown was chaotic and shocking |
Cai is currently Mayor of Beijing, and his success of hosting the Winter Olympics earlier this year in a closed loop earned him brownie points. But in 2017 in a bid to reduce the capital city's population, he kicked out many migrant workers who were living in the outskirts of the city.
Ding is a trained engineer and one of Xi's closest confidants. He has worked as Xi's secretary since 2007, and seven years later became head of the presidential office, similar to chief-of-staff.
Li is Party Secretary of Guangdong Province where he pushed for the development of the tech industry and economic reforms.
Should we be surprised there are no women in this powerful policy-making body? For a country that claims "women hold up half the sky", it doesn't seem to trust or believe women are capable of doing the job...
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