By Angus Foster
China's Communist Party
is about to unveil the country's next generation of leaders. Almost all will be
career politicians who have risen through the ranks. But what are the secrets
of success in one of the world's most rigid authoritarian systems?
Start
young
Age is very important in
China, and if you haven't been singled out for high office by the time you are
in your mid-twenties, it's probably too late.
The two men who are set
to become China's new president and premier, Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang, both
joined the Party aged 21 and have never worked outside it.
Nowadays children get
exposed to politics even earlier, starting from age six when they wear the
distinctive red neckerchiefs of the Young Pioneers. Formal political education
doesn't really start until selected children join the Communist Youth League,
from 14, and promising students are eligible for full party membership from 18.
To join the Party, you
have to write an application letter to your local party cell, be accepted into
a study group, have your thinking and background thoroughly examined, then be
approved as a probationary member. There is a formal ceremony held before the
Party's flag - a yellow hammer and sickle on a red background - and new members
swear the Party oath.
New member's oath
New member's oath
It is my will to join the
Communist Party of China, uphold the Party's program, observe the provisions of
the Party constitution, fulfil a Party member's duties, carry out the Party's
decisions, strictly observe Party discipline, guard Party secrets, be loyal to
the Party, work hard, fight for communism throughout my life, be ready at all
times to sacrifice my all for the Party and the people, and never betray the
Party
"It's quite an
emotional experience," according to one female party member, who did not
want to be named. "In China you don't even swear an oath at your wedding,
so joining the Party was my only time."
Joining is not easy. In
2011 22m people applied and only 3m were accepted. Overall membership rose
slightly to 83m, making it arguably the largest private club in the world.
People want to join for
different reasons. Membership brings high status and significant privileges,
like access to restricted information, government jobs and a chance to meet
people who can help your job prospects. For others, joining is about sacrifice
and wanting to contribute to China's future.
"Joining showed you
were one of the best students, and close to the centre of power," the
female member said. "Later on, it's fear of being excluded that makes you
want to join."
Choose
your faction
The most important
factor in how far you rise is your patron, or kaoshan in Chinese - meaning the
mountain you can rely on.
"If you have a
patron who can get you into the queue for jobs when you're young, ahead of
other people, you are poised for greatness," says Minxin Pei of Claremont McKenna
College.
For children of
high-levels officials this is easy, since they have the help and protection of
their parents' networks of influence.
About half of China's
most senior leaders now fall into this category, and are known as the "princelings"
because of their privileged upbringings.
The other important
faction is known as "tuanpai", people like outgoing President Hu
Jintao who have risen up through the Communist Youth League. Coming from more
humble backgrounds, they are usually thought to be more concerned with popular
issues like subsidised housing or rural incomes.
For most of the past
five years, the two groups have been battling over who gets the next generation
of top jobs. Xi Jinping, a princeling with extensive family ties, pipped Hu
Jintao's protege Li Keqiang for the top job, but some other posts are still up
for grabs.
"It's not just two
blocks which need to be balanced against each other," according to Steve
Tsang of Nottingham University. "Multiple games are being played in terms
of factional politics and personal ambitions. You try to form alliances,
persuade people that what you can offer is more attractive than the
others," he says.
China's censored media
doesn't report the battles. When snippets of unverifiable rumour emerge, they
suggest a ruthless political culture. Ling Jihua, a close ally of Hu Jintao,
appears to have missed out on promotion after his son was killed in a car crash
- allegedly driving a Ferrari, with two partially-dressed women as his
passengers.
Study
morality
Throughout China's
history, its leaders have been expected to govern with a sense of moral duty.
So while the Party, like the emperors before it, believes it has an
unassailable right to govern, it also believes it has the duty to govern
fairly.
There is a long
tradition of eulogising good officials, whose devotion and sacrifice is held up
as a public model.
Nowadays, officials need
to show their superiors they are able to govern well. They are subjected to
annual reviews where factors like GDP growth, tax revenues and social stability
in their areas are key. At grassroots levels the Party has allowed some
elections, though officially approved candidates almost always win. Some higher
officials' promotions are also now approved by limited public consultation.
These measures help the
Party claim it has public legitimacy. But most Chinese would say its successful
management of the economy is why it should stay in power.
Officials also need to
appear humble, and remember the Party's watchwords "Serve the
people".
Outgoing premier Wen
Jiabao has become one of China's most popular leaders because of his ability to
connect with ordinary people. After every earthquake, landslide or flood
"Grandpa Wen" - as he is widely known - is quickly there, chatting
sympathetically and ready to help.
Even though critics say
it's an act, Wen's apparent humility earns him huge respect.
Don't
flaunt it
As China's economy has
boomed, high-level corruption has become the biggest source of popular anger
against the Party.
Measuring its scale is
impossible, but corrupt officials are thought to have smuggled $120bn out of
the country since the mid 1990s.
There is also resentment
against perks of office like banquets, expense accounts and lavish gifts which
have become an important extra source of income.
The Party has responded
by cracking down on the most blatant culprits. It says tens of thousands of
people have been punished.
But critics say the
campaigns are often propaganda, and the Party knows it has to tolerate most
official corruption precisely because so many people are implicated.
"If you start,
where do you stop? Because everyone's touched by it," says Richard
McGregor, author of The Party.
The result is that top
officials and employees of state-owned companies are able to get rich, but must
take care not to show off that wealth conspicuously.
Shaanxi official Yang
Dacai has learned that lesson. He was sacked this year after an internet
campaign exposed how many expensive watches he owned, and asked how he could
afford them on a provincial official's salary.
Be
male
Only about a quarter of
Party members are women.
No woman has ever
reached the Politburo's standing committee, its highest decision-making body.
In the wider, 24-strong
Politburo, only one woman, Liu Yandong, has a seat.
Don't
stand out
Modern China's founders
- men like Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping - were charismatic visionaries who
almost single-handedly dictated the country's future.
“Start Quote
You want to be a tallish
poppy, but not a tall poppy”
Steve Tsang Nottingham
University
Nowadays leaders have to
climb a tangled bureaucracy which demands total obedience.
The party's absolute
control of politics and the media means that any mistake could be your last.
The most spectacular
recent example came in 2012 when Bo Xilai, former party secretary of Chongqing
and sometimes tipped for even higher office, was sacked and expelled from the
party. His wife was jailed for murdering a British businessman and Bo himself
faces charges of corruption, abuse of power and - an old party favourite -
"improper sexual relations".
But many Western
analysts say Bo's real crime was to challenge the established way of doing
politics. Populist policies and a crime crackdown were a dangerous bid for
legitimacy, and a threat to those who awaited promotion via the party's usual
negotiated consensus.
"You want to be a
tallish poppy, but not a tall poppy. If you stand out too far you may get
chopped down," says Tsang.
Not standing out extends
to your clothes and appearance - dark suits and dark hair, with no greying
allowed.
Work
somewhere poor
For a party with no
democratic mandate, it is vital top leaders appear to understand the challenges
faced by ordinary people.
The party's organisation
department, an all-knowing bureaucracy which decides who gets every senior
party and government job, therefore makes sure its future leaders have done
time far from the comforts of Beijing.
Outgoing President Hu
Jintao spent four years in Tibet, seen by Chinese as a particularly arduous
posting. One of the rising stars among China's younger leaders, 49-year-old Hu
Chunhua, is serving time in Inner Mongolia.
Be
ruthless
All political systems
breed ruthlessness, but China's is especially unforgiving.
"If you get pushed
out of power they make sure you never come back. You don't just lose your job,
they go after your family and destroy your name," says Minxin Pei.
Ambitious leaders are
advised to first read Houheixue, or Thick Black Theory - a classic of political
dark arts published in the last century. It says the weapons needed to succeed
are a thick skin, which is immune to shame or guilt, and a black heart,
hardened to hurting others for your own gain.
NOTE-- Republished from the BCC
Stay tuned to TIBET TELEGRAPH for more news and views on Tibet and Tibetan life and on areas of interest to the Tibetan readers
Very good post that makes much sense of the route one has to follow to achieve "success" in the Communist Party. My only criticism is that, although it is alluded to, a "good" Communist can follow all the protocols - and yet be denounced by those who are jealous, or are in possession of information about an individual's grandparents that make them look not "pure" - and that individual will be demoted, denounced, perhaps thrown in prison or put to hard labor which, of course, ruins their chances at further promotion. I have read several books by people who have escaped China that fully describe the horrors of this "system;" in one, a girl's father totally believed in the system, yet was denounced by jealous people in the small town he'd grown up in. He had to do hard labor for a while; when he returned he was given a post far below what he'd had; he eventually committed suicide.
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