B.RAMAN
The 18th Congress of the Communist Party
of China (CPC) is all set to meet at Beijing from November 8, 2012. Hu Jintao
will be handing over as the General Secretary of the Party to Xi Jinping at the
Congress and a new Standing Committee of the Politbureau, a new Politbureau and
a new Central Committee will be elected at the Congress. They will be in office
till the 19th Congress in
2017. Normally, a new Central Military Commission (CMC) of the Party should
also be elected at the Congress.
2. Normally, the members of the new party organs
are chosen through consensus by the outgoing Central Committee and formally
elected by the new Congress. The outgoing party organs, which assumed
office at the 17th Congress in
2007, are presently meeting in Beijing to reach a consensus on the composition
of the new party organs to be formally elected next week and to approve the
report on the work done by the outgoing organs for submission to the 18th
Congress.
3. Hu Jintao as the outgoing General Secretary and
Xi Jinping as his successor should be playing the leading role in finalising
the composition of the new party organs. Speculation from Beijing indicates
that Jiang Zemin, a strong personality from Shanghai, who was the predecessor
of Hu as the Party Secretary and as the Chairman of the Party CMC and who still
wields considerable influence in the party circles in Shanghai, has been playing an important role in the
finalisation of the composition of the new party organs and that under his
influence, a neo conservative political leadership, which wants to go slow on
political reforms, seems to be well-poised to occupy key positions under Xi.
4. The importance of political reforms to sustain
the economic reforms, which was the keynote of the policies advocated by Prime
Minister Wen Jiabao, has been given less importance in the deliberations
preceding the new Party Congress. Improving people’s livelihood, incremental
political reforms and innovative democracy are the keynotes of the new policy
being advocated.
5. Any idea of a multi-party democracy is firmly
rejected. The firm leadership of the Communist party, the modernisation of the
functioning of the party and the improvement of inner party democracy to
provide for greater transparency in its functioning, better choice for the
party cadres in the election of the party functionaries and greater
accountability of the functionaries to the cadres and the people are now
stressed as the new features of innovative democracy.
6. The new party functionaries, who are expected to
take over under XI, are projected in the speculation as advocates of a play safe policy in respect of
political reforms. Economic and political stability and not political experimentation
will be their objective.
7. In an article published on
November 3,2012 , the “People’s Daily”, the party daily, said: “The social
unrest caused by Russia’s “shock therapy,” Latin America’s “radical reform,” or
certain African countries’ copying of the U.S. political system proves that
slavish imitation of Western democracy will lead to turmoil. Democracy takes
various forms according to different national condition, and good democracy
should first suit a country’s national conditions. China has attached great
importance to the people’s livelihood and incremental reform, and pursued
suitable democracy through gradual innovation in a pragmatic manner. Democracy
is not only a system of government, but also a way of life which meets people’s
needs. Admittedly, as public awareness of the rights to know and participate as
well as the rule of law increases, democracy in China has not reached the level
many people expect. However, the country is making steady progress in improving
its democracy.”
8. Thus, the new party leadership, which will be
taking over next week, is trying to reduce expectations of a Chinese spring or
a brave new world of Chinese democracy. This is not the time for political
experimentation. That is the message that has been coming out from Beijing. (
3-11-12)
(The writer
is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi,
and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate
of the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com Twitter @SORBONNE75)
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