That "the CPC Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping as the core" was officially put forward at the meeting is "where the fundamental interests of the Party and state lie," Liu Qibao, a member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Publicity Department, said in the first official comment after Xi's elevation.
It is also a fundamental guarantee for the adherence to and strengthening of the CPC leadership, Liu was quoted as saying by state-run Xinhua news agency after the party issued a communique about the decisions of the four-day meeting of the Party Plenary, which concluded here yesterday.
The strong leadership of the CPC with Xi as the core is vital to China's targets to build an "all-round moderately prosperous society" for the CPC's centennial in 2021, and for it to become a "modern socialist country" in time for China's centennial in 2049, Xinhua quoted Liu Dongchao, a professor with the Chinese Academy of Governance as saying.
However, analysts said the "core of the leadership" often represented the power of final approval or veto.
From the early 1990s, various top-level documents and state media reports referred to Jiang as the "core", a title that eluded Jiang's successor and Xi's predecessor, Hu Jintao, a report in the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post said.
During Hu's decade-long term as party chief, he was only referred to as the "general secretary" of the leadership, and in practice he was the "first among equals" with the other eight Politburo Standing Committee members.
With his new core status, Xi is expected to play a more dominant role in orchestrating next year's reshuffles - a sharp contrast to Hu's position 10 years ago, it said.
Up to 11 seats on the 25-strong Politburo will also be vacated, including up to five members of the seven-member Politburo Standing Committee who are expected to retire, the Post report said today.
Unlike the official title "general secretary", the term "core" and its powers are not defined by party regulations.
Beijing-based political commentator Zhang Lifan said the new reference meant Xi was guaranteed to have unchallenged authority in the party.
(Reopens FGN12)
However, Zhang said Xi's crowning moment also comes with uncertainties.
The CPC meeting approved two documents on the discipline of the party, including the norms of political life within the party under the new situation and a regulation on intra-party supervision.
Jiang, 90, is still active and is widely believed to have exercised influence in CPC and the military since his official retirement in 2004. He has also been seen in public recently.
Much on the expected lines, editorials of the official media came out in strong support of the CPC's decision to elevate Xi's status saying that the move has public backing.
"Since 2012, China has faced great pressure in the fronts of development, reform and diplomacy. The Chinese economy has come to an adjustment period that cannot be bypassed. Taking the initiative to adapt to the new normal has become a pressing task and challenge.
"The sweeping anti-corruption campaign, which is aimed at realising clean politics, has not only punished corrupt officials, but also reconstructed understandings about modern Chinese society. Comprehensively deepening reform has touched upon almost all areas of China while the international strategic situation during this period has posed more pressure on China's rise. It's fair to say the past four years have been quite difficult," it said.
The CPC communique also singled out members of the Central Committee, the Politburo and the innermost Politburo Standing Committee as the prime targets for the new conduct rules, making it clear that senior cadres would be judged on whether they toed the line on party positions, the Post report said.
"Senior cadres must not fudge their stand on fundamental matters, must not waiver on their political stance, must not be affected by incorrect ideology," it said.
To stem corruption, the party would address election fraud and end the buying and selling of official posts and vote rigging. Leading officials were banned from using their positions to seek benefits for friends and family, it said.
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