CHINA DOWNPLAYS LIFTING OF PRESIDENTIAL TERM LIMIT
China sought on Sunday to
downplay the Communist Party's move to scrap presidential term limits, a
decision that could pave the way for Xi Jinping to remain president for life.
The National
People's Congress (NPC), China's rubber-stamp parliament, will vote on March 11
on constitutional amendments which include the scrapping of a rule limiting the
top leader to two five-year terms.
NPC spokesman Zhang
Yesui told a news conference that the move will merely align the presidency
with the titles of Communist Party general secretary and Military Commission
chairman, which do not have term limits.
"It is
conducive to uphold the authority of the Central Committee of the party with
comrade Xi Jinping at the core and also to unify leadership," Zhang said
on the eve of the opening of the NPC's annual session.
Zhang revealed that
the party's Central Committee proposed the constitutional amendments, which
include adding Xi's eponymous political guidelines to the country's charter, in
January.
But the decision was
first made public on February 25 in a report by the official Xinhua news
agency.
The announcement
sparked a rare bout of public criticism, prompting censors to work furiously to
stamp out dissenting posts on social media.
Xi has consolidated
power since taking office as party chief in 2012 but the move to lift
presidential term limits surprised even the most experienced China watchers.
China's late
paramount leader Deng Xiaoping championed a system of "collective"
leadership to prevent a return of the chaotic years under Mao Zedong's one-man
rule from 1949 to his death in 1976.
The presidential
term limits were engraved in the state constitution in 1982.
"The
constitution must adapt to the changing circumstances, include new experiences,
reflect new achievements and lay out new guidelines to remain relevant,"
Zhang said.
"Revising the
constitution is certainly a big event in the country's political life and it is
also a major legislative activity that will have wide-ranging implications."
US President Donald
Trump had his own views on Xi's power play on Saturday, according to audio from
a closed-door Florida fundraiser at his Mar-a-Lago resort published by news
outlet CNN.
"He's now
president for life," the 71-year-old US president said, eliciting chuckles
from the crowd of Republican donors. "And look, he was able to do that. I
think it's great."
He garnered even
more laughs when he quipped: "Maybe we'll have to give that a shot some
day."
SOURCE: AFP
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