Deposed Sichuan Governor Wei Hong joins a long list of those sidelined in a sweeping crackdown on dissent, civil society and corrupt officials.
Unusually, the accusations against Wei made no mention of graft. He was accused only of violating "party discipline," not of breaking the law, demoted to a vice departmental post and removed from his party duties.
Wei had been "disloyal to the party, dishonest and failed to value the many opportunities to receive education and rectify his wrongdoing," the party's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said in an unusually long statement on its website.
No details were given about the specific accusations against Wei, who had spent most of his career in the Sichuan party apparatus and was also a delegate to the national party and government congresses.
The accusations appear to show an expansion of Xi's anti-corruption campaign to include those who fail to profess fealty to his leadership personally, said Willy Lam, who closely follows China's elite politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Whereas previous leaders had tolerated some degree of factionalism, Xi appears intend on removing all who would fail to toe the line, Lam said. Wei may have been suspected of being under the sway of one of Xi's two predecessors, Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao, he said.
The son of a founder of the communist state, Xi has increasingly turned to well-worn methods of state propaganda to promote his image. He's appeared on decorative plates, medals, and billboards, and even established a presence on social media within China's narrowly confined online world.
More so than usual, Xi has dominated state broadcaster CCTV's newscasts in recent days, visiting mountainous areas of central China where the nascent Communist Party established its foothold in its early days.
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