Special report | Internal rifts
Trying to heal the party’s wounds
The party Xi Jinping inherited had been torn apart by infighting. He now wants to ensure that no one in the party defies him
A FEW DAYS after he took power in November 2012, Xi Jinping convened a “collective study” session of the Politburo. Looking at the 22 men and two women round the table in an imperial-era building in Zhongnanhai, the party’s headquarters, he may have felt uncomfortable. Most owed their positions to his predecessors, not him. The party had been traumatised by a fierce power struggle. Who was reliable? Beyond the high-walled compound, Chinese society was changing at a dizzying pace, with the emergence of a large middle class. An internet-fuelled information revolution was under way. Could the public be trusted?
This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “Healing the wounds”