• @nekandro@lemmy.mlOP
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    -1511 months ago

    The CPC isn’t a monolithic entity either. While the leader of the party is the most powerful, actual change in the party happens from the bottom-up.

    • @stevehobbes@lemy.lol
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      1111 months ago

      lol. Tell that to the autocrat that consolidated all the power.

      Change doesn’t happen in that party unless Xi says so. Same with Russia and Putin.

      • @cecinestpasunbot@lemmy.ml
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        211 months ago

        What evidence is there that Xi consolidated all the power? Is it that he led an anti corruption campaign and has been in power for ten years? Is it that he isn’t directly elected by the people? Because by those standards Angela Merkel would also be a dictator.

          • @cecinestpasunbot@lemmy.ml
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            211 months ago

            I mean just go read the CPC constitution. There are translations of it in English readily available.

            As far as I can tell, the party constitution gets updated at every party congress and doesn’t afford Xi any special powers. He is included as an ideological leader in the party’s general program but that’s not unique to him. The same can be said for every CCP leader since the constitution was first adopted. Additionally, the constitution still clearly states that all party leadership is subject to oversight. It also lays out rights every party member has that no member of leadership is allowed to curtail. I don’t know how you could read this document and come away thinking it gives Xi total control over the party unless you’re already biased to interpret it that way.

        • @Lynthe@sh.itjust.works
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          -311 months ago

          One has to understand internal CCP politics through very imprecise measures, but one key thing to look at factional power within the CCP. Xi, by all accounts, has managed to suppress and marginalize all other factions within the party. This can be seen in the tangible result of his norm breaking additional term(s?) as leader of the party.

          • @cecinestpasunbot@lemmy.ml
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            011 months ago

            The CCP is a democratic centralist party. As such, factionalism has always been heavily discouraged. None of that is new.

            Additionally the role of president, for which term limits were abolished, is not a particularly powerful one in China. The president serves at the behest of the national people’s congress standing committee and only has leeway to engage in foreign diplomacy. Xi likely has more influence over Chinese state affairs as general secretary of the CCP which never had term limits.

            That said, it’s weird to see western media trying to read the tea leaves so they can write salacious stories about China’s palace intrigue when policy debates are happening out in the open. I’m willing to bet most western experts on China just don’t actually read any of the primary sources.

      • @nekandro@lemmy.mlOP
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        -1011 months ago

        Oh sorry, you must have meant the Democratic Party where unelected party insiders (super delegates) chose Clinton to run against Trump despite Sanders polling better in the matchup.

    • @Dead_or_Alive@lemmy.world
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      411 months ago

      Lol no. Xi has eliminated or purged every individual and has gutted every institution that could serve to oppose his reign that there is no one left who can make policy decisions on a national level.

      Xi has also killed the messenger so many times that there is no one left who will bring him accurate information.

      Bottom level bureaucrats are reduced to making decisions based on what they think Xi wants. The result has been a string of absolute failures wolf warrior diplomacy, the spy balloon, etc.

      The CCP and China are what state failure looks like in its early stages.

      • @cecinestpasunbot@lemmy.ml
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        -211 months ago

        What evidence is there for this beyond mere speculation? Most articles on Xi from the western press read more like gossip magazines than investigative journalism. They’re full of things like “body language experts” and other fluff but not much else.

        The same is true for the “spy balloon” or “wolf warrior diplomacy”. While we don’t know what the balloon’s purpose was, the US has basically admitted that it wasn’t collecting any data. As for “wolf warrior diplomacy” it amounts to minor Chinese state officials being sassy on twitter. There’s no evidence that such behavior was state policy.

        Concluding that China is bound to collapse based on this kind of flimsy evidence is so silly.