Not a voice is missing. Xi Jinping obtained a historic third term as Chinese president on Friday March 10 after a formal vote by deputies. Since the Parliament in China is, in practice, subservient to the Communist Party (CCP) in power, the outcome of the ballot was in no doubt, and the result announced shortly before 11 a.m. local time (4 a.m. in Paris) is clear: 2 952 votes for, zero against, zero abstentions.
The 69-year-old leader had already obtained in October 2022 a five-year extension at the top of the CCP and the military commission, the two most important positions of power. The only candidate, he was reappointed for the same term as Head of State.
The last few months have, however, been complicated for Xi Jinping, with large demonstrations at the end of November 2022 against his “zero Covid” policy and a large wave of deaths which followed the abandonment, in December, of this health strategy.
Sensitive subjects carefully avoided during the current annual session of Parliament, a highly orchestrated event during which Li Qiang, an ally of Mr. Xi, should become the new prime minister to replace Li Keqiang. A new vice-president must also be formally elected by parliament on Friday, replacing Wang Qishan.
“A Vision of China”
MEPs have mainly focused in recent days on an institutional reform plan aimed at beefing up the science and technology ministry and China’s digital capabilities, in the face of what the government presents as Western “containment” against China in that sector.
The annual session of Parliament also saw the announcement of a modest growth target of “around 5%” for 2023 and a rising defense budget.
The formal re-election of Xi Jinping to the top of the state crowns a remarkable political rise during which he went from politician little known to the general public to the most powerful Chinese leader in decades.
Author of a biography on the president, the Swiss writer and journalist Adrian Geiges believes that personal enrichment is not his primary motivation. “That’s not what interests him,” he told Agence France-Presse. He really has a vision for China, he wants China to become the most powerful country in the world. »
Many challenges
For decades, the People’s Republic of China, scalded by political chaos and the cult of personality during the reign (1949-1976) of its leader and founder Mao Tse-tung, had promoted a more collegial governance at the top of power. Under this model, Xi Jinping’s predecessors, namely Jiang Zemin and then Hu Jintao, had each given up their place as president after ten years in this position.
But Mr. Xi put an end to this rule by abolishing the limit of two presidential terms in the Constitution in 2018, while allowing a quasi-cult of personality to develop around him. He therefore becomes the longest-serving supreme leader in recent Chinese history. Septuagenarian at the end of this new mandate, he could even potentially extend for a new five-year term if no credible dolphin asserts himself in the meantime.
But his challenges remain numerous at the head of the second world economy, between the slowdown in growth, the fall in the birth rate, the difficulties of the real estate sector or even the international image of China to improve.
Relations with the United States are at their lowest in decades, with many disputes, from Taiwan to the treatment of Uyghur Muslims, to rivalry in technology.
Xi Jinping this week condemned the “policy of containment, encirclement and repression against China” implemented by “Western countries led by the United States” and which “has brought unprecedented challenges to development ” from the country.