Close to Xi Jinping, Li Qiang new Prime Minister of China

Li Qiang, considered one of Xi Jinping’s closest trusted men, was named China’s new prime minister on Saturday, the day following the Chinese president was reappointed for a third term.

Xi Jinping, 69, won a new five-year term as China’s president on Friday following a unanimous vote in parliament, the culmination of a rise that has seen him become China’s most powerful leader. country for generations.

Since the Parliament was, in practice, subservient to the ruling Communist Party (CCP), the outcome of the ballot was in no doubt.

Saturday in another vote of deputies gathered at the People’s Palace in Beijing, Li Qiang, the only candidate for the post of Prime Minister, obtained 2,936 votes for, three once morest and eight abstentions.

The journalists were asked to leave the hemicycle when the deputies formalized their vote in the ballot box.

Li Qiang, 63, a former Communist Party official in Shanghai, whose image had been somewhat tarnished in the spring during the chaotic confinement of his city, succeeds Li Keqiang, in office since 2013.

After his appointment, Li Qiang was sworn in on the Constitution.

Right fist raised and left hand on the document, he swore to “work hard to build a great modern socialist country”.

– Complicity and friendliness –

The Chinese Premier heads the State Council. Its function is traditionally associated with the day-to-day management of the country and the conduct of macroeconomic policy.

Li Qiang, who had been propelled to the rank of number two in the Communist Party (CCP) in October, has no experience at the central government level, unlike almost all former prime ministers.

However, he has had a rich career in local government and has held important leadership positions in the wealthy coastal provinces of Zhejiang (east) and Jiangsu (east).

Li Qiang was Xi Jinping’s chief of staff when he was party leader in Zhejiang between 2004 and 2007.

His promotions, which have been rapid since, reflect the high level of confidence placed in him by the Chinese number one.

Saturday at the People’s Palace in Beijing, Xi Jinping and Li Qiang appeared accomplices at the time of the vote, exchanging pleasantries with a smile.

Li Qiang takes office at a time when the world’s second-largest economy is facing a sharp slowdown, weakened by nearly three years of an inflexible so-called “zero Covid” policy.

For 2023, the government has set itself a GDP growth target of “around 5%”, one of the lowest in decades.

– “Stricter control” –

Outgoing Prime Minister Li Keqiang, an economist by training, had seen his plans for economic reform hampered by the growing authority of Xi Jinping.

“It is unlikely that Li Qiang has the authority to further develop” this path, political scientist Willy Lam of the Chinese University of Hong Kong told AFP.

Especially since Xi Jinping “insists on the need for stricter control of the economy by the state and the party”, contrary to the practice in force since the end of the 1970s, underlines Mr. Lam.

On Saturday, the deputies also appointed Zhang Youxia and He Weidong as vice-presidents of the Central Military Commission (of which Xi Jinping is chairman), Zhang Jun inheriting the post of president of the Supreme Court.

Ying Yong, former party leader of Hubei province (center) where the first cases of Covid-19 were discovered, was elected prosecutor general of the Supreme People’s Procuratorate.

Liu Jinguo becomes the head of the National Supervisory Commission, the body that deals with the fight once morest corruption.

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