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China's Xi rides high hopes ahead of presidency

LUOTUOWAN VILLAGE, China--China's fawning state media, jaded social media commentators and even poor corn and cabbage farmers agree: New Communist Party chief Xi Jinping is off to a good start.

“General Secretary Xi doesn't put on any airs. He talks like an ordinary person,” said 69-year-old farmer Tang Rongbin. The new leader visited Tang's sparse, dimly lit farmhouse in Luotuowan village in December, bearing gifts of cooking oil, flour and a blanket.

Xi has styled himself as an economic reformer, an iron-fisted graft-buster, a staunch nationalist and a no-frills man-of-the-people — spurring expectations for change. But as he prepares to be appointed to the largely ceremonial role of president, pressure will be growing on him to deliver.

China faces rising public anger over endemic corruption, a burgeoning rich-poor gap and the degradation of the country's air, soil and waterways. Slower economic growth and territorial disputes, especially with Japan, add to the tension.

Mounting protests over environmental issues, land seizures and high-handed officialdom point to the underlying social discontent. Days before the party conclave that brought Xi to power last year, thousands of protesters in the eastern city of Ningbo faced off against riot police outside government offices, calling on officials to halt a chemical plant expansion.

“I think there has been a revolution of rising expectations,” said Willy Lam, an expert on party politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “People realize they can get away with even demonstrations to make their wills heard.”

Joining the clamor for change this past week were dozens of prominent intellectuals who signed a petition urging the government to ratify an international treaty on protecting human rights and the rule of law. Also, a group of about 100 parents of gays and lesbians urged lawmakers to legalize gay marriage.

The annual session of the national legislature, which opens Tuesday, will complete the once-a-decade handover of power that began in November when Xi and his leadership team assumed the top positions in the Communist Party. At the end of the session, Xi will take the title of president from his predecessor as party leader, Hu Jintao.

Deputies to the National People's Congress will rubber-stamp appointments of senior officials to the State Council, or Cabinet, to run economic and foreign policies; Xi and other party leaders finalized the personnel changes at a closed-door meeting last week. The No. 2 party leader, Li Keqiang, will become premier, the country's top economic official.

A separate meeting of the government's top advisory body held its opening session Sunday, with its chairman promising to support the new leadership.

1 Comment
March 5, 2013    Leiduowen@
Curbing: possibly, to some extent, rooting out: no way, Joe! You would have to remove some cornerstones of Chinese culture like guanxi or renqing. How possibly could a guy like Xi Jinping do that? Yet failing to handle this issue properly can bring about the fall of the whole CCP rule so the stakes are pretty high. I wonder how long they can actually defy the typical dynastic cycle, repetitive throughout the whole Chinese history.
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Chinese President Hu Jintao, left, together with Premier Wen Jiabao, right, and Vice President Xi Jinping, second right, greet CPPCC Chairman Jia Qinglin, second left, as they prepare to leave at the end of the conference's opening session in Beijing, Sunday.(AFP)

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