At the time, Deng had said “the separation of the party and government” was necessary to unleash an economic boom that continues to endure. Yet Xi has gone in the opposite direction, arguing that China’s centralized system provides an alternative model for countries to get rich without embracing Western democracy.
The National People’s Congress gathering that began Monday in Beijing was poised to formalize and expand that structure. Lawmakers also prepared to appoint Xi to a second term and repeal constitutional term limits preventing him from staying on indefinitely.
For Xi, the proposals represent the culmination of a five-year push to reassert party control. In October, he revived a phrase from Mao and declared, “east, west, south, north and center -- the party leads everything.” Lawmakers were also expected to amend China’s constitution to establish the party’s leadership as a “defining feature” of the political framework.
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