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China’s political elites get a message on loyalty ahead of party congress

  • Central Committee endorses ‘lenient’ punishment of senior official for wrongdoings that took place before Xi Jinping took power
  • Li Jia – accused of ‘vote rigging in party elections’ and breaking the rules by asking about efforts to fight corruption – has been demoted

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Li Jia, former head of Shanxi’s political advisory body, lost his party titles and was demoted from ministerial to vice-ministerial level in the government system. Photo: Handout
Hundreds of China’s political elites have wrapped up their final preparations ahead of a key gathering of the ruling Communist Party. They were also sent a message on political loyalty as they endorsed the “lenient” punishment of a senior official for wrongdoings that took place before Xi Jinping took power.
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At a conclave in Beijing that ended on Wednesday, the Central Committee confirmed the punishment of four officials for their wrongdoings. But it was the case of Li Jia, former head of the Shanxi provincial political advisory body, that stood out.

The accusations against Li date back to before 2012, the year Xi took the party’s helm, though the exact timing and details remain unclear. Li’s most senior roles pre-2012 were on the party’s standing committee in Inner Mongolia – first as the region’s personnel chief from 2008, then as its security chief from 2011.

Li has been accused of “vote rigging in party elections” and violating party rules by inquiring about its efforts to fight corruption, according to an August statement from the party’s anti-graft body, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

It also accused Li of “lacking party principles” and accepting valuable gifts from business owners, and he was placed under investigation for corruption.

However, the CCDI statement noted that the wrongdoing had happened prior to the party congress in 2012, so he was granted leniency. Li lost his party titles and was demoted from ministerial to vice-ministerial level in the government system – punishment that was endorsed by the Central Committee on Wednesday.

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Li’s case was announced amid a far-reaching campaign targeting corruption in the Inner Mongolian coal industry that began in 2018, with investigations said to go back two decades. The region is one of China’s largest coal producers.
Hu Chunhua was the party chief of Inner Mongolia during Li’s time as a senior official in the region, though there is no suggestion Hu is connected to the case. A Politburo member since 2012, Hu is the youngest member of the 25-strong decision-making body and one of four vice-premiers.
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