Xi Jinping

2022 - 10 - 23

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China's Premier Li Keqiang dropped in leadership shuffle (NPR)

Premier Li Keqiang, China's No. 2 official, is among four of seven members of the nation's all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee who will not be ...

In his remarks, he said the party, which marked its 100th anniversary last year, is still in its prime. Those percentages were roughly the same as in the last Central Committee. Hu, 79, spoke briefly with Xi, whom he had been sitting next to in the front row, before walking off with an assistant holding him by the arm. Only Central Committee members can serve on the Standing Committee. There was no official comment. BEIJING — Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, the nation's No.

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China's president Xi Jinping expected to secure historic third term in ... (The Guardian)

Xi Jinping is expected to be granted a precedent-breaking third term at the end of a key political meeting in Beijing.

Li is the top official responsible for the development of the Greater Bay Area, Xi’s master plan for an integrated economic powerhouse of nine Chinese cities with Hong Kong and Macau. Xi and the six members of the new Politburo Standing Committee have just walked on stage. We should always remember their dedication and sacrifice.”

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China's top leaders revealed as Xi Jinping cements grip on power ... (CNN)

Chinese leader Xi Jinping has formally stepped into his third term ruling China with an iron grip on power, as he revealed a top leadership body stacked ...

“The current situation is something unprecedented … we’re seeing a kind of re-centralised bureaucracy in China, which will definitely impact the future China’s economic foreign policy trajectory,” he said. Instead, Xi had filled the four open spots on the seven-member body with Xi long-time allies and proteges, Li Qiang, Cai Qi, Ding Xuexiang and Li Xi, clearing the path for him to rule for a third term with minimal internal resistance – and underlining that affinity to Xi trumps all else in China’s current political landscape.

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Xi Jinping secures historic third term as China's leader (Aljazeera.com)

Chinese Communist Party elects Xi Jinping as its general secretary for a precedent-breaking third term.

Shanghai Communist Party chief Li Qiang followed Xi, meaning that he is likely to succeed Li Keqiang as premier when the latter retires in March. Xi introduced the new lineup, walking at the head of the group as he lead them onto the stage at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People to meet reporters. The Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) elected Xi as its general secretary for a precedent-breaking five-year term on Sunday, tilting the country decisively back towards one-man rule after decades of power-sharing among its elites.

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China names Xi Jinping loyalists for core leadership group (CNBC)

Li Qiang, party secretary of Shanghai, walked out second behind Xi at a meeting with press on Sunday. Li is a known Xi loyalist and oversaw stringent Covid ...

Xi had set the stage for an unprecedented third, five-year term as president with constitutional changes in 2018. "We expect that policy focus will not be on launching new stimulus, but on implementing the existing policies and letting them take effect," Pang said. He said China could not develop in isolation from the world, but that the world also needs China. [achieve "national rejuvenation." Top-level economic policy in China is largely set by Politburo members. [affirmed China's greater focus on national security and "high-quality" growth.](https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/16/chinas-xi-downplays-need-for-rapid-growth-proclaims-covid-achievements.html) In fact, that shift away from high-speed growth of past decades means [China faces "a new situation for attracting foreign investment,"](https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/17/chinas-new-growth-goals-require-a-change-for-attracting-foreign-investors-official-says.html) an official at the economic planner said. However, Li Keqiang has been an official face and leader of implementation in his role as premier and the head of the State Council, China's top executive body. State positions such as president and premier won't be confirmed until the next annual meeting of the Chinese government, typically held in March. - State positions such as president and premier won't be confirmed until the next annual meeting of the Chinese government, typically held in March. Outgoing Premier Li Keqiang had walked out second behind Xi at a similar meeting with press after the conclusion of the party's 19th National Congress in 2017. [Xi Jinping](https://www.cnbc.com/xi-jinping/) broke precedent Sunday by paving the way for his third term as president, and the likely appointment of a premier with no prior experience as vice premier. - Chinese President Xi Jinping broke precedent Sunday by paving the way for his third term as president, and the likely appointment of a premier with no prior experience as vice premier.

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Xi Jinping secures 3rd term as Chinese Communist Party leader (Axios)

The full membership roster of the new standing committee is Xi Jinping, Li Qiang, Zhao Leji, Wang Huning, Cai Qi, Ding Xuexiang and Li Xi. The Party ...

Li was in charge of Shanghai during its [heavily criticized](https://www.axios.com/2022/04/12/shanghai-china-covid-lockdowns)lockdown earlier this year, making his ongoing position heavily dependent on Xi's support. [said](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/oct/23/hu-jintao-not-feeling-well-when-he-left-china-congress-says-state-media)the former leader was not feeling well. [unexpectedly escorted out](https://www.axios.com/2022/10/22/former-chinese-leader-escorted-out-congress) of the closing ceremony of the Communist Party Congress on Saturday. [amended](https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinas-communist-party-amends-its-charter-strengthens-xi-power-2022-10-22/)to enshrine Xi as the "core" leader. Li and Wang were [Xi Jinping](https://www.axios.com/2021/04/06/global-capitalism-china-repression-uyghurs) secured an unusual third term as leader of the Chinese Communist Party, the country's most powerful position, after a weeklong [Party congress session](https://www.axios.com/2022/10/16/xi-jinping-china-communist-party-congress-third-term) that ended on Sunday, [according](https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/china-xi-jinping-communist-party-congress/card/xi-jinping-gets-third-term-as-chinese-communist-party-leader-w1eIar6VDgwVJb0uJ7Gv) to Chinese state media Xinhua News Agency.

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In Mao's footsteps: Xi Jinping puts himself at core of China's ... (The Guardian)

On Saturday, it became clear that Xi had shuffled premier Li Keqiang and reformer Wang Yang into retirement, so he could pack the politburo standing committee – ...

“Xi’s policy of putting ideology and national security over economic development will continue for the coming five or even 10 years, as he is eager to rule until the 22nd party congress in 2032, when he will be 79.” Instead he abolished term limits on the presidency, is packing the government with allies, and could potentially become leader for life. The congress, the most important gathering of China’s five-year political cycle, brings 2,400 delegates from all over the country together to rubber-stamp decisions taken by the party elite. The 79-year-old seemed confused and reluctant to leave his seat on stage at the Great Hall of the People when he was approached by an aide or official, who whispered in his ear and tried to lift him from his seat. The week-long meeting was planned with precision and paranoia, and Xi emphasised party unity throughout. The closing session of the 20th congress of the Chinese Communist party (CCP) ended a weekend of triumph for Xi that makes him China’s most powerful ruler since Mao Zedong.

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China's Xi Jinping expands powers and promotes allies (NPR)

BEIJING — President Xi Jinping, China's most powerful leader in decades, increased his dominance when he was named Sunday to another term as head of the ...

2 member and Zhao Leji, a member of the previous committee, was promoted to No. The promotion of Li Qiang was especially unusual because it puts him in line to be premier despite not having experience as a Cabinet minister or vice premier. Some new Standing Committee members lack national-level government experience that typically is seen as a requirement for the post. Xi announced Li Qiang, a former Shanghai party secretary who is no relation to Li Keqiang, was the No. The party also named a seven-member Standing Committee, its inner circle of power, dominated by Xi allies after Premier Li Keqiang, the No. The official Xinhua News Agency later reported Hu was in poor health and needed to rest.

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China's Xi Jinping Gets Third Leadership Term In “Most ... (Forbes)

The Chinese Communist Party Congress held in Beijing over the past week started out slow but has ended with a bang. China President Xi Jinping, as expected, ...

over Taiwan and Beijing’s close ties with Russia, and has been watched by governments, businesses and investors globally for signs of future policy directions in the world’s most populous nation and second-largest economy. Incumbent, reform-minded Premier Li Keqiang wasn’t named to the new Politiburo at a time when private sector business leaders are concerned about new income redistribution measures and a government tilt in favor of state-owned enterprises. “This is the most unforgettable meet in CCP (Chinese Communist Party) history,” Tweeted Yawei Lu, director of the China Program at The Carter Center. The party meeting came amid geopolitical tension with the U.S. Lu cited the secrecy around the event, “massive revision” of the party charter, party secretary’s Xi Jinping’s third term in the position, and the “humiliating exit” of Xi predecessor Hu Jintao, among other factors. China President Xi Jinping, as expected, has won a new term as Communist Party secretary at a congress that will be memorable for his display of political power and the dramatic exit of his predecessor Hu Jintao.

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Xi Jinping's China (INQUIRER.net)

Yesterday marked the closing day of the 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which opened on Oct. 16. Today, the CCP's Central ...

A former professor of politics and dean of the law school at Fudan University, he is widely regarded as Xi’s principal adviser. He was only thinking like a Marxist for whom socialism made sense only in the context of a productive and developed economy. Like Deng, he regarded the development of productive forces as the historic role of capitalism, not socialism. That is why every China observer keenly watches the lineup of China’s leaders as they walk onto the front stage at the closing of each party congress. So dominant has Xi become as China’s leader that he is now mentioned, in the simplified periodization of the country’s recent history, as the third figure in a triumvirate, after Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. He went after businessmen who parked their money abroad and kept it out of the reach of the Chinese government. He did the same thing in the military, purging it of leaders previously thought untouchable. At the same time, recognizing the power of digital connectivity, his media team introduced a “Xi app” that not only propagated his thoughts but also functioned as an all-purpose platform for accessing essential services. The only question is whether he will be conferred the title of “Chairman,” as in Chairman Mao. He clipped the wings of those who thought their global reach had made them financial superstars worthy of adulation. Xi Jinping is expected to be reelected to a third five-year term as head of the CCP. Xi will not only be the head of the CCP; he will also be the chair of the Central Military Commission and, of course, the president of the People’s Republic of China.

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China's Xi Jinping secures historic third term in office (INQUIRER.net)

The Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party elected Xi as its general secretary for another five-year term, Xinhua reported, tilting the country ...

Now, he is much better,” Xinhua said on Twitter, a social media platform that is blocked in China. [China’s Communist Party Congress to end with Xi Jinping set for third term](https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1683597/chinas-communist-party-congress-to-end-with-xi-jinping-set-for-third-term#ixzz7iVlLKRLQ) [Xi in control at China Congress, as ex-president removed](https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1683692/xi-in-control-at-china-congress-as-ex-president-removed#ixzz7iVlP76UN) Analysts were closely watching for whether the party charter would be amended to enshrine “Xi Jinping Thought” as a guiding philosophy, a move that would put Xi on a par with Mao. The 20th Congress wrapped up on Saturday after elected the new Central Committee of around 200 senior party officials, who gathered on Sunday to elect the Standing Committee — the apex of Chinese political power at which Xi sits firmly at the top. [Xi Jinping](https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1676683/who-is-chinas-president-xi-jinping) secured a historic third term as China’s leader on Sunday, state media reported, after a Communist Party Congress in which he cemented his position as the nation’s most influential leader since founder Mao Zedong. His anointment in a closed-door vote on Sunday came after a week-long gathering of the party faithful in Beijing during which they endorsed Xi’s “core position” in the leadership and approved a sweeping reshuffle that saw former rivals step down.

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China's Leader Xi Jinping Secures Third Term As His Rivals Fall Away (Forbes)

China's former President Hu Jintao is escorted out of the closing ceremony of the Communist Party's 20th National Congress as President Xi Jinping and ...

In his opening address of the party congress, Xi again praised his Covid-Zero policy as a “people’s war” that has prevented fatalities and protected lives, although he didn’t acknowledge the repeated city-wide lockdowns, food shortages and lack of medical supplies that resulted. Xi had rolled out his campaign for more affordable housing in 2017, which set off a wave of policies aimed at taming skyrocketing housing prices and reining in the excessive borrowing that had become common among Chinese property developers. And in a rare display of drama at an otherwise highly choreographed event, Hu Jintao, the 79-year-old predecessor to Xi, The elevation of Shanghai Party Secretary Li Qiang is particularly noteworthy and speaks volumes to Xi’s consolidation of power. Li is most well known for overseeing the bruising month-long lockdown of Shanghai earlier this year, which triggered widespread public anger and raised doubts as to whether he might still earn a much-coveted promotion. His appointment means that he will be in firm control of the world’s second-largest economy for at least another five years at a time when it increasingly finds itself on a collision course with the U.S.

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Xi Jinping is seduced by a vision of greater isolation. A mistake that ... (The Guardian)

As the leader enters his third term, there are increasing signs that the country is turning inwards, replacing the outside world with cyber 'reality'

Being virtually connected to the world can provide rich data in the abstract, but lived experience matters, too, and there is a tone-deafness to much of China’s recent international forays. It mirrors precisely the idea of being highly connected to the world while closed to it physically. But the zero-Covid policy is very much associated with Xi personally and his speech made it clear that there is no prospect of it changing in the short term at least. The Ming dynasty analogy tweeted out in August is not a simple one. Diplomacy, academic links and trade can’t really function if one of the partners is only rarely willing to step into the wider world. The decision is not entirely political: part of the problem is that China continues to have a huge proportion of unvaccinated older people and its patchily effective domestic vaccines do not prevent infection or transmission very well. But the quick in and out visits that global entrepreneurs regularly take to other countries are no longer possible and over time this may well affect China’s international competitiveness as it seeks to attract talent and finance in areas such as tech. The piece, published in a respected but specialist journal, argued that during the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) and Qing dynasty (1644-1911), China had been a country relatively closed off to the outside world. Nobody stopped visitors from observing democracy in all its guises in the liberal world, but they understood that open discussion of the concept stopped when they arrived back at Beijing airport. But travel in and out of China, for foreigners and Chinese alike, has become much harder. And attention at the end of the Congress has been on the sudden, still unexplained But there are other signs that the China of the 2020s may be considerably less open than the one we have known for some four decades from the 1980s to 2020.

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China's leader Xi Jinping secures third term and stacks inner circle ... (The Guardian)

Xi unveiled as general secretary of ruling Communist Party, tilting China back towards one-man rule after decades of power-sharing among elite.

Like Xi, Cai spent many years in Fujian province at the start of his career, and moved on to Zhejiang. Where it previously listed Taiwan alongside Hong Kong and Macau as a place with which to “build solidarity”. For the first time in 25 years the new politburo contains no women members where previously there was one, vice-premier Sun Chunlan, and has reduced in number to 24 from 25. “The party and country risk becoming a ‘one-voice chamber’ where only one voice will be heard. The long-speculated reappointment signalled Xi’s successful and overwhelming consolidation of power in Beijing, with retention of the role as chair of the military commission, controlling the People’s Liberation Army. It now only swears to “resolutely oppose and constrain Taiwan independence”.

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Xi Jinping promotes loyal Shanghai chief to upper echelons of power (Financial Times)

Li Qiang becomes the party's second-highest ranking official after presiding over disruptive Covid lockdowns.

99 € for 3 months 345 € for 1 year 1 € for 4 weeks

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Xi Jinping's party is just getting started (BBC News)

Comparing Xi Jinping to Mao Zedong is "inane", scoffs Rebecca Karl, a professor of Chinese History at New York University.

"China today has no socialist characteristics" she says "The subordination of labour to capital is complete. It's hard to deny that millions of Chinese hold Xi personally responsible for the cruelty of China's grim lockdowns. "Everything and everybody got a cut, but it got out of control," he adds. As I prepared to leave China in 2008, the Soviet-era airport had given way to a glittering megastructure designed by Norman Foster. In 1992, Deng - who had remained China's "paramount leader" - declared that the party should allow "some people to get rich first". The word on everyone's lips was "xia hai" or "dive into the sea". By the time I returned in 1998 the whole country had taken to heart Deng's invocation "to get rich is glorious". "My first introduction to China was in the 1980s, when the debates about China's future were huge, significant, and consequential," Prof Karl says. He ran the Communist Party - and the country - from the republic's founding in 1949 until the day he died in 1976. Hardliners, led by Premier Li Peng, believed the students' goal was to overthrow the party, and wanted the protests quashed. The truth is Xi's path to power was far from inevitable. He is known, only half-jokingly, as the Chairman of Everything.

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Xi Jinping chooses 'yes men' over economic growth in politburo purge (The Guardian)

China's president doubles down on ruling for life, excluding potential future leaders or factional rivals.

Xi’s commitment to annex and “re-educate” Taiwan were this week enshrined in the party constitution. Hu was escorted from the stage at the closing of the party congress on Saturday, apparently reluctantly, in an episode that sealed Xi’s pre-eminence. Hu Chunhua had been tipped as a prospective new PSC member, but Xi found no place for the 59-year-old who was perceived by some analysts as a potential threat to the leader. “Xi has reiterated several times that the performance indicators that matters above all in Xi’s new era is political loyalty,” said Sung. A decade of political purges, increased surveillance and tightened social control has resulted in the 69-year-old leader consolidating personal power to a level not seen since Mao Zedong. For the first time in 25 years there was no woman on the politburo; there has never been a woman on the highest seat of power the politburo standing committee.

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Xi to Unveil Leadership in China Communist Party Congress: Live ... (The New York Times)

The lineup reveals the extent of Mr. Xi's control over the Chinese Community Party. He was selected for a third term as leader, breaking with recent norms.

Mr. On Saturday, Mr. [version of history crafted under Mr. In their stead, Mr. Since 2013, most members of Mr. The promotion of Mr. Then Mr. Li contrasts with Mr. But now Mr. His ties to Mr. A close aide to Mr. But his longstanding ties to Mr.

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China's re-elected leader introduces new top team (BBC News)

China's re-elected leader Xi Jinping has revealed his choices for the Politburo Standing Committee - the Communist Party's top decision-makers.

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Xi Jinping Exposed (Council on Foreign Relations)

The recently concluded Chinese Communist Party also reflects what may turn out to be a flawed strategy of Chinese leader Xi Jinping putting himself at the ...

Xi's biggest risk—and his greatest weakness as a strategist—is that he has put himself on the firing line. He gutted many of Mao's policies and set in motion economic reforms that turned China into the economic juggernaut that it is today. But this is hardly the destruction of an ancient system of checks and balances. As for the economy, the government line is that the current slowdown is due to the Covid lockdowns and a global slowdown. The question now is if Xi can manage expectations that he is creating for some sort of reunification in the near to medium term. He has yet to create the conditions necessary for China to become a high-income country. And he began a military modernization that is bearing fruit today in the form of aircraft carriers and other advanced hardware. The 63-year-old obtained the post despite his presiding over a long Covid lockdown in Shanghai, but this might have worked in his favor, showing him to be a loyal follower of Xi's approach. He also managed to sideline several officials not thought to be close to him, including the outgoing premier, Li Keqiang, and the former governor of Guangdong Wang Yang. The congress itself had ended Saturday but this moment is the apogee of high drama in China's political system. But the past week's events also reflect what may turn out to be a flawed strategy of Xi putting himself at the center of everything—making him seem strong while actually vulnerable. All of this is being hailed as Xi running the tables, with many analysts calling him China's strongest leader since Mao Zedong, who ran China from 1949 to 1976.

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Xi Jinping still China's leader in historic third 5-year term - Manila ... (manilastandard.net)

“The new Politburo Standing Committee confirms decisively that Xi has consolidated power at the top of the Communist Party to an extentunseen since the Mao era, ...

Xi has promoted a narrative in his first decade of power that he has rectified huge problems that beset China and the Communist Party during the reigns of Hu and his predecessors. Analysts had closely watched for whether the party charter would be amended during the Congress to enshrine “Xi Jinping Thought” as a guiding philosophy, a move that would put Xi on a par with Mao. On Saturday the delegates elected the Central Committee of around 200 senior party officials, who on Sunday chose the 24-person Politburo and the Standing Committee. “The new Politburo Standing Committee confirms decisively that Xi has consolidated power at the top of the Communist Party to an extentunseen since the Mao era,” said Neil Thomas, a senior China analyst at Eurasia Group. Li Qiang—a former chief of staff for Xi who oversaw a grueling two-month Covid lockdown in Shanghai this year— was named as number two in the Standing Committee. Six of Xi’s proteges and allies were also unveiled on Sunday alongside him as members of the Politburo Standing Committee—the party’s apex of power that rules the country.

China's Xi Jinping expands powers, promotes allies | The ... (Business Mirror)

BEIJING—President Xi Jinping, China's most powerful leader in decades, increased his dominance when he was named Sunday to another term as head of the ...

2 member and Zhao Leji, a member of the previous committee, was promoted to No. The promotion of Li Qiang was especially unusual because it puts him in line to be premier despite not having experience as a Cabinet minister or vice premier. The party also named a seven-member Standing Committee, its inner circle of power, dominated by Xi allies after Premier Li Keqiang, the No.

Xi Jinping begins third 5-year term, elevates several allies along ... (NPR)

AYESHA RASCOE, HOST: China unveiled its new leadership lineup on Sunday. Xi Jinping stays on as party chief for a third term, as expected, but there were also ...

This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. And it's really hard at this point to see who's left in the inner circle to stand up and offer criticism or even just an alternative viewpoint to the way Xi Jinping wants to run things. The rest of the leadership lineup, like we said, are men who are allies and proteges of Xi Jinping. He's the party secretary of Shanghai, which had a very ugly COVID lockdown in April and May. And there's nobody in the top ranks of the party who's obviously being groomed to succeed Xi, which is by design. He's consolidated power in the party and in the military. But neither was considered to be a very close ally of Xi Jinping, and it seems that that was their downfall. The party constitution was amended to include some wording about Xi Jinping that really elevated his stature in the sort of pantheon of Chinese leaders - just building on a cult of personality that's been growing around him. And in the top echelons of the party, they have historically sought a balance of power between factions or at least representation from different sort of patronage networks. I mean, at the actual closing ceremony of this weeklong party congress, Xi's predecessor, Hu Jintao, was led out of the room in a very sort of unscripted way. And it surprised a lot of observers, frankly. Xi Jinping stays on as party chief for a third term, as expected, but there were also some surprises.

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Your Monday Briefing: Xi Jinping Consolidates Power (The New York Times)

Plus Britain prepares for a new leader and Russia forcibly resettles Ukraine's children.

[this narrated long read about Yiyun Li](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/23/podcasts/the-daily/the-sunday-read-how-yiyun-li-became-a-beacon-for-readers-in-mourning.html?rref=vanity), a novelist beloved for her powerful distillations of grief. [You can find all our puzzles here](https://www.nytimes.com/crosswords). Johnson pulled out of the race yesterday evening, despite speculation that he was [eyeing a return to power](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/22/world/europe/boris-johnson-liz-truss.html?campaign_id=0&emc=edit_mbae_20221024&instance_id=0&nl=morning-briefing%3A-asia-pacific-edition®i_id=0&segment_id=0&te=1&user_id=e54be69add3d6dc111a82076a341830f). It will span sakura (cherry-blossom) season and incorporate ingredients and methods from the region, which is [the historic center of Japanese Buddhism](https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/18/t-magazine/kyoto-japan-travel-guide.html). [Xi did not mention two long-repeated maxims](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/22/world/asia/china-xi-jinping-congress-security.html?name=styln-china-party-congress®ion=TOP_BANNER&block=storyline_menu_recirc&action=click&pgtype=LegacyCollection&variant=show&is_new=false) about peace and strategic opportunity. Read his [witty essay](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/12/23/the-art-of-dying) from 2019 on his lung cancer diagnosis. [Wang Huning](https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/10/22/world/china-xi-jinping-congress/xis-chief-ideologue-wang-huning-at-the-center-of-everything?smid=url-share), his chief theoretician, remains on the body, a sign that hard-line policies and the role of ideology will persist. [elevating loyalists and forcing out moderates](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/22/world/asia/china-xi-jinping-congress.html). And in a moment packed with symbolism, Hu Jintao, who presided over one of China’s more open and prosperous periods, was [ushered out of an important political meeting](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/22/world/asia/hu-jintao-china-congress.html?smid=url-share). The ubiquitous modern tasting menu has its roots in kaiseki, a carefully orchestrated progression of small plates that grew from a Buddhist tea ceremony into a luxurious cuisine in Kyoto. But officials in Kyiv and Washington are casting doubt on whether the buildup represents a serious threat. Li oversaw a contentious Covid lockdown in Shanghai and is now in line to become China’s new premier.

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