In October last year, the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) set the ‘rule of law’ (yifa zhiguo) as
the principal theme of a plenary session for the first time. There was a good
deal of scepticism about this move. Certainly it could not have been a move
contemplated lightly because elevating the rule of law and establishing its
independence and integrity potentially challenges the supremacy of the Party.
The rule of law, properly conceived, would constrain the Party’s power. Yet
unchecked power exercised without the constraint of codified laws and
principles might well come to corrode the power and damage the legitimacy of
the Party itself.
Indeed, one could observe,
this had been the cancer gnawing away at the vitals of the Chinese Party-state
— a cancer that increasingly threatened the legitimacy of the Party itself — in
the lead up to the assumption of power by the current Chinese leadership.
Untreated it might tear the state asunder. Without confidence in the legal
system, many other things were likely to fall apart. Confidence at home and
abroad in the operation of private markets increasingly depended on the rule of
law. But there was a deeper issue. If the people had no faith in the rule of
law and the abuse of official power in all its forms, and enjoyed no sense of
fairness in their dealings with the state and with each other, the bonds of
social cohesion will be threatened.
The distinguished academic,
Yang Guangbin, in our lead essay this week,
observes the ebb in the confidence of the Chinese people in the years after
2008 that led the ‘Party finally (to decide) to adopt the strategy of rule by
the constitution or “Chinese constitutionalism”’.
When Xi ascended to the
Chinese presidency, he faced a very complex political scene domestically. The
Bo Xilai affair hung over the leadership transition ominously, underlining the
need to deal with disquiet among the Chinese public over corruption and the
relationship between the state and economic power. There was increasing unease
within the elite about the direction that the Party was heading.
Political disorder blocked
economic reform. The monopolistic position of state-owned enterprises was being
entrenched, rather than weakened. Collusion between government officials and
businesses was increasingly endemic, reinforcing special interest groups and
exacerbating corruption. If Xi wanted to secure popular support, he needed to
deal with state monopolies and money power; but he ran the risk of undermining
his power base if he wasn’t prepared to see off threats from some very powerful
interest groups that were becoming a more and more important feature of the
economic and political landscape.
This is the context which
has seen a remarkable consolidation of Xi’s political power and, with his new
authority, the initiation of comprehensive reforms across the panoply of
government institutions. The Party’s Central Committee has moved to deepen
reforms to promote the ‘modernisation of the state governance system and
governance capacity’. As Yang explains, Xi ‘established new institutions and
authorities to expand his power and maintain control. These new institutions
include: the Leading Group for Deepening Reform Comprehensively; the National
Security Commission, which the former General Secretary of the CCP, Jiang
Zemin, was unable to establish; and a leading group for cyber-security and
information. Xi is in charge of all these new institutions. This means that all
the institutions of the Party, State Council and military are now responsible
to Xi and only Xi. As a result, Xi acts as the de facto Party Chairman — like
Mao Zedong once did’.
‘In the past year, Zhou
Yongkang, formerly a member of the Politburo Standing Committee, Xu Caihou,
former Vice-President of the Central Military Commission, and Ling Jihua, the
supervisor of party management for Hu Jintao, were all rounded up and indicted.
Over 200,000 government officials have been investigated for corruption. The
unexpected and unprecedented scale and strength of the campaign shows Xi’s
determination to defend the Party’s rule’. The assault on Zhou broke what many
considered an unspoken rule to not go after Party heavyweights or their
families after they have retired from office. But if Party heavyweights
are exempt, there would be no sustained confidence in the rule of law.
Meanwhile, Yang argues, the
economic reform agenda which had stagnated has been revived. Xi’s anti-corruption
drive has broken down vested interest groups, while Premier Li Keqiang has
focused on the economy. ‘Likonomics‘
stresses the decisive role of the market over the state in resource allocation
and Li is reshaping government regulation to give effect to this precept.
Among the noteworthy results
that Yang reports are that the number of newly-established private enterprises
which increased by more than 30 per cent in 2014. And while growth dropped to
7.4 per cent, the lowest in 24 years, employment expanded.
So far, Xi seems to have won
widespread support in this campaign, and his leadership has attracted strong
public backing. The consolidation of political power around his leadership has
huge advantages in coordination of the affairs of the state in dealing with big
issues that were threatening to get out of hand. The question is whether the
personalisation of policy heft and the centrality of the Party are consistent
with long term transformation of governance around the rule of law and
constitutionalism which is his stated goal. In the short term, moves like
lifting the control of local courts up a level to remove them from local
interference is likely to deliver better outcomes to Chinese business
confidence, and even some citizens. Taking the privileged down a peg or two is
likely to reassure citizens, but the climate of fear that constrains worthy
activists as well as venal officials creates an political environment
antipathetic to the long term goal of effecting a major advance in Chinese
political accountability.
The new emphasis in China on
the rule of law is an important shift from the old reference points of clan and
emperor — and relying on virtuous leadership to deliver fairness and justice
for the people — to the idea of embodying the public interest in a constitution
and to raising the position of the rule of law with its attendant rights and
duties and civic responsibilities that must impinge upon the behaviour of
leaders, however virtuous, as well as upon the behaviour of other and ordinary
citizens.
Yang sees Xi’s grand design
as evidence of his being ‘a far-sighted reformer rather than a politician
satisfied with the temporary ease and support of his position’. Certainly, Xi
is a most powerful reformer and has in many ways taken on the mantle of the
Party. It will be difficult for Xi, and for the Party, to retreat: China’s
economy is unlikely to flourish without the large-scale reforms on
which it is apparently embarked, and these reforms will ultimately stand or
fall on comprehensive entrenchment of the rule of law.
Peter Drysdale is Editor
of the East Asia Forum.
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