'Great Helmsman' Xi wins unanimous vote

'Great Helmsman' Xi wins unanimous vote

President Xi Jinping casts his ballot during the National People's Congress (NPC) session in Beijing on Saturday, where he was unnimously re-elected. (AFP Photo)
President Xi Jinping casts his ballot during the National People's Congress (NPC) session in Beijing on Saturday, where he was unnimously re-elected. (AFP Photo)

BEIJING: China’s parliament unanimously reappointed Xi Jinping as president while installing one of his most trusted allies as vice-president, highlighting how little public opposition remains to his rule.

Moments after the vote, the People’s Daily newspaper proclaimed Xi as China’s “great helmsman” in an alert sent to millions of mobile phones. The history-laden honorific had previously been reserved for Mao Zedong.

The rubber-stamp National People’s Congress voted 2,970 to zero to give Xi a second five-year term on Saturday, days after repealing a constitutional provision that would’ve barred him from a third. Although legislative dissent is rare -- only four lawmakers withheld support for Xi’s first term in 2013 -- no president has received a unanimous vote in at least a quarter-century.

The legislature also confirmed Wang Qishan -- a well-known economic reformer who oversaw Xi’s signature anti-corruption campaign -- as vice-president. Wang’s appointment was opposed by one lawmaker, who was not identified.

Delegates applaud as a screen displays the final vote tally for Xi Jinping on Saturday in Beijing. (AFP Photo)

The votes cap months of Communist Party conclaves and pageantry that confirmed Xi’s status as arguably the world’s most powerful leader. Xi, 64, got his name written into the constitution and party charter -- putting him on a status equal to Mao Zedong -- and laid the groundwork for breaking the precedent of handing over power after two complete terms.

“Xi will be chairman of everything,” said Ether Yin, a partner at the advisory firm Trivium China in Beijing. “He has effectively put himself at the centr of the whole country.”

While most of Xi’s power flows from his roles as party chief and supreme military commander, being president -- or “chairman” in Chinese -- gives him legal standing as head of state. The largely ceremonial role of vice president is second in succession and can carry out duties delegated by the chief executive.

Wang’s appointment to the vice-presidency allows Xi to retain a trusted surrogate with connections to the US diplomatic and financial communities. He helped set up China’s first investment bank with Morgan Stanley in the 1990s and also established enduring ties with prominent Wall Street figures such as Henry Paulson.

Wang, 69, and Xi have known each other since their days as “sent down youths” in China’s countryside during Mao’s Cultural Revolution. After Xi came to power in 2012, Wang was charged with overseeing Xi’s campaign against corruption, disciplining more than 1.5 million party cadres, including the country’s retired security chief and another official once seen as a presidential contender.

Yanmei Xie, a China policy analyst for Gavekal Dragonomics in Beijing, said appointing Wang could extend decision-making beyond the seven-member Politburo Standing Committee, the party’s top body and a key component of the collective leadership system set up after Mao’s tumultuous rule.

“Basically, it’s him minimizing collective leadership without abolishing the institution altogether,” Xie said. “Xi will be relying on a collection of personal advisers to run the country and make decisions.”

Chinese lawmakers were expected to confirm new terms for more top officials -- including Premier Li Keqiang and top military and law enforcement officials -- in votes on Sunday. Several minister-level appointments were scheduled for Monday, including a replacement for retiring central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan and the head of a new agency to regulate the country’s $43-trillion finance-and-insurance sector.

Besides appointing Xi, the legislature also passed a plan on Saturday to create, eliminate or consolidate dozens of state agencies under a sweeping government overhaul aimed at solidifying party control.

Lawmakers were also expected to confirm the leader of a powerful new law enforcement and ethics commission to police millions of public servants, party officials, academics, journalists and state company managers.

The changes leave Xi with sole responsibility for China’s $12-trillion economy, mounting debt pile, more aspirational middle class and growing overseas interests. He’s attempting to build a developed economy without loosening political control, staking the party’s legitimacy on its ability to make China rich and strong.

Xi’s new power might provide reassurance to investors who believe that bureaucratic resistance has slowed his reform agenda. Still, centralized control by one man could become a problem should his health fail or subordinates fail to question bad decisions from the top.

“Xi’s dominance has been achieved through top-down measures, such as tightened discipline and the anti-graft drive, as well as skillful politics, rather than the winning of hearts and minds,” said Tom Rafferty, the Economist Intelligence Unit’s regional manager for China “That points to a potential fragility, but we do not expect any challenge to his position to emerge in the coming years.”

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