
Xi tightens leash on officials' boozing and lavish living
Local officials gathered in China's central city of Xinyang in March for a seminar about regulations requiring them to be frugal. Over lunch, five officials consumed four bottles of baijiu, a fiery sorghum-based spirit, flouting the very rules they had studied.
One of them died that afternoon, according to an official account, which didn't state the cause of death. The officials at the lunch tried to hide the illicit consumption of alcohol, the account said, by paying off the deceased official's family and omitting the drinking in their reports to superiors.
The Communist Party's top disciplinary agency highlighted the incident amid a new campaign to denounce extravagant and profligate conduct within the party's rank and file, underscoring Xi Jinping's struggle to rein in what he sees as widespread hedonism in China's bureaucracy.
'The party center has beaten drums and swung hammers, issued orders time and again," but some officials still 'turned a deaf ear and showed no fear or awe," the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said in its disclosure on the incident. 'For such problems, we must insist on zero tolerance."
The CCDI said authorities have punished more than a dozen officials in relation to the Xinyang incident, with penalties including censure, probation, demotion, removal from positions and expulsion from the Communist Party.
The Chinese Communist Party's top disciplinary agency has denounced misconduct within the party's rank and file.
Beijing reinforced its message with updates to its frugality rules for party and state workers, published in May, adding provisions that included an explicit ban against serving alcohol, gourmet dishes and cigarettes at official meals.
Other clauses prohibit floral displays and elaborate backdrops at work meetings, and the purchase of extravagant equipment for events. The new rules, added to a 2013 frugality code, are meant to promote the view that 'thrift is glorious."
Xi's belt-tightening efforts underscore how China's economic woes have reverberated across the country, with sluggish growth, a real-estate slump and a weak job market forcing many to adjust to doing more with less. Many local governments have been struggling under heavy debts for years.
Such difficulties have stoked public unrest and fueled grumbling over Xi's stewardship of the world's second-largest economy.
'Updating the frugality code will not solve Beijing's fiscal challenges," said Neil Thomas, a fellow on Chinese politics at the Asia Society Policy Institute. 'But it reinforces Xi's political control over the bureaucracy and burnishes his image as a leader who stands against corruption and excess, especially at a time when many ordinary Chinese are feeling economic pain."
Xi has been urging officials in recent years to 'get used to living frugally" as part of a government belt-tightening campaign. He has ramped up a crackdown on petty corruption, which has targeted opulence, bribery and other misconduct by low-level bureaucrats that affect ordinary citizens.
The crackdown has driven disciplinary cases to record levels. The party punished nearly 313,000 people in 2024 for breaching the 'eight-point regulations," a directive against frivolous and wasteful conduct that Xi enacted shortly after taking power in 2012. This was more than double the 2023 figure and 10 times the total in 2013, the first full year of Xi's leadership, according to CCDI data.
'It is pretty clear that its decades-old anti-extravagance message is not getting through," said Andrew Wedeman, a professor at Georgia State University who studies governance and corruption issues in China. Despite the enforcement, 'cadres will continue to skirt around those new rules and find ways to continue to engage in 'research'—yanjiu," Wedeman said, referring to a Chinese phrase that also sounds like 'tobacco and alcohol."
The latest drive against extravagance started in March, when Xi launched an ideological campaign requiring all party members to study the spirit of the party's eight-point regulations.
The CCDI recommended a lengthy reading list, including four anthologies of Xi's remarks on discipline and over a dozen sets of party regulations and directives, including rules against convening official meetings at scenic tourist spots and using public funds to buy fireworks for the Lunar New Year.
Then in May, the party published the updated frugality code, which included more detailed guidelines on how public money should be spent on government meetings, receptions, travel, offices and vehicles.
As well as preventing the display of floral and plant arrangements at work meetings, the new guidance bars officials from using government vehicles for private purposes and gambling while traveling abroad. Officials were also told to avoid arranging activities to welcome or send off visitors at airports, railroad stations and docks.
The new guidance also prohibits officials from carrying out lavish renovations of party and state facilities under the guise of repair work. Another provision requires officials to 'resolutely prevent inefficient and ineffective investments."
'Xi wants to signal that the party leadership can detect and discipline cadres who are taking advantage of their positions," said Thomas at the Asia Society Policy Institute.
State media issued reassurances that the revised rules wouldn't affect government salaries and are merely intended to end excessive workplace indulgences.
Authorities have also made a show of punishing miscreant officials, past and present, to soothe public resentment.
In one recent case, authorities in the southwestern city of Ya'an opened an investigation against a former bureaucrat after his 17-year-old daughter posted a photo of her wearing luxury earrings on social media.
The image sparked an uproar, with some users claiming that the earrings cost about 2.3 million yuan, equivalent to around $320,000. Others questioned how she could afford them, given that her father was once a civil servant.
State media reported in May that Ya'an authorities had uncovered alleged misconduct by the father during his time as a government worker from 2011 to 2017. Investigators accused him of illegally engaging in business activities and concealing the fact that he had a second child when applying to join the civil service, a violation of China's one-child policy that was in force at the time.
The father's alleged misconduct 'will be dealt with seriously and in accordance with the law," state television said.
Write to Chun Han Wong at chunhan.wong@wsj.com

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


United News of India
3 hours ago
- United News of India
Rijiju says Arunachal to become richest state in coming years
Itanagar, June 10 (UNI) Union Minister Kiren Rijiju on Tuesday said Arunachal Pradesh is on a fast track to development under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and projected that the state will become the 'richest in the country' within the next seven to eight years if the current momentum is maintained. Addressing a gathering in Itanagar to mark the completion of 11 years of the Modi-led NDA government, the Union Minister for Parliamentary Affairs and Minority Affairs highlighted the transformative changes brought to the frontier state in the last decade and said it was time to accelerate progress. 'We have all the natural resources. We only need to bring the necessary reforms to our society. Under PM Modi and CM Pema Khandu's leadership, we must move even faster. The work done over 11 years will be wasted if we do not continue to win people's trust,' Rijiju said. On the contentious Siang Upper Multipurpose Project (SUMP), Rijiju reiterated its status as a strategic necessity and a well-thought-out initiative vital for both national security and regional development. 'This is not just a power project; it is essential for managing water resources and countering China's hydropower developments upstream of the Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra) river,' he stated. 'This project is vital not just for power but also for flood control in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, and even Bangladesh,' he said, underlining the broader regional impact. The Union Minister warned of the potential threat posed by Chinese engineering capabilities. 'China can divert rivers and build 1,000-km-long tunnels. That's the level of risk we face,' he cautioned. Addressing the concerns of the indigenous Adi community and residents living in the Siang basin, Rijiju emphasized that their culture, tradition, and agricultural livelihoods will be fully protected. 'The project has to be built, but it must benefit the people in front of it. Their identity should not be harmed in any way,' he said. Rijiju acknowledged the opposition to the project, stressing that the protestors are 'not enemies, but our own people.' He urged dialogue, patience, and empathy. 'They are protesting with emotion. We must talk to each of them, explain properly. It is our responsibility to take them along,' he said. The Union Minister also cautioned against what he called 'external elements' allegedly influencing local sentiments. 'Some are coming from outside and misleading people. They must be checked. We have to address misinformation without confrontation,' he added. Referring to past challenges in securing investment, Rijiju said, 'There was a time we had to beg for investment in hydropower, but under Modi ji, things changed. Now, we are making Arunachal self-reliant and economically strong.' He concluded by calling for collective effort and unity, saying that Arunachal's journey towards becoming a state with the highest per capita income must not be derailed. 'We must work even harder to win the hearts of our people,' he said. The SUMP, with a proposed capacity of 11,000 MW, is being implemented by NHPC and has drawn both support and resistance from local communities over concerns of displacement and environmental impact. UNI TD BD


Mint
3 hours ago
- Mint
China, US Haggle Over Details as Trade Talks Stretch On
Supply Lines is a daily newsletter that tracks global trade. . Talks between the US and China extended later into their second day in London, with financial markets on edge as the world's largest economies negotiate over key tech and industrial exports and deescalating their trade war. The teams, led by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, were still holding discussions Tuesday night in order to iron out technical details, according to a Treasury official. Members of the US and Chinese delegations returned to Lancaster House, a Georgian-era mansion near Buckingham Palace serving as the meeting site, just after 8 p.m. local time and resumed talks, which began around 10:40 a.m. The sides had taken a break around 5:30 p.m. 'We're going to try to finish things, so that's the objective,' US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters. 'I think we're working on all sorts of trade issues and I think the talks are going really, really well.' Asked if negotiations would conclude Tuesday, Lutnick said, 'if they need be, we'll be here tomorrow but I hope they end this evening.' Bond and currency markets are closely monitoring the talks for clues on the potential economic impact. US stocks rose to session highs following Lutnick's remarks. President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday that 'we are doing well with China. China's not easy,' adding that he was 'only getting good reports' from that day's nearly seven-hour session. Bessent said after day one they had a 'good meeting.' The key issue this week is re-establishing terms of an agreement reached in Geneva last month, in which the US understood that China would allow more rare earth shipments to reach American customers. The Trump administration accused Beijing of moving too slowly, which threatened shortages in domestic manufacturing sectors. In return, the Trump administration is prepared to remove a recent spate of measures targeting chip design software, jet engine parts, chemicals and nuclear materials, people familiar with the matter said. Many of those actions were taken in the past few weeks as tensions flared between the US and China. 'A US decision to roll back some portion of the technology controls would very much be viewed as a win by China,' said Dexter Roberts, nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council's Global China Hub, adding that the possibility of unwinding 'any controls' seemed 'pretty much unthinkable' until recently. A month ago Beijing and Washington agreed to a 90-day truce through mid-August in their crippling tariffs to allow time to resolve many of their trade disagreements — from tariffs to export controls. Lancaster House carries historical significance. It has hosted major addresses by UK prime ministers, speeches by central bank governors and parties for Britain's royal family. At the same time, Trump's trade team is scrambling to secure bilateral deals with India, Japan, South Korea and several other countries that are racing to do so before July 9, when the US president's so-called reciprocal tariffs rise from the current 10% baseline to much higher levels customized for each trading partner. Meanwhile, Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday held his first phone conversation with South Korea's newly elected President Lee Jae-myung and called for cooperation to safeguard multilateralism and free trade. 'We should strengthen bilateral cooperation and multilateral coordination, jointly safeguard multilateralism and free trade, and ensure the stability and smoothness of global and regional industrial chains and supply chains,' Xi said, according to the CCTV report. With assistance from Colum Murphy. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


NDTV
3 hours ago
- NDTV
Goodbye Lenin? Russians Flock To See Bolshevik Leader's Tomb Before Closure
Moscow: Russians are flocking to catch what some fear could be a final glimpse of the embalmed body of Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin before his tomb on Moscow's Red Square, long a place of pilgrimage for communists, closes for repairs until 2027. The mausoleum, which houses a waxy-looking Lenin replete in a three-piece suit inside what is purportedly a bullet-proof, blast-proof glass case, is due to be structurally overhauled after an inspection uncovered problems. Once a popular attraction for Western tourists and still a favourite for Russians visiting the capital from the regions, the red and black granite structure is expected to close in the coming weeks, with repair work set to last until June 2027. Officials say that the body of Lenin, who died in 1924 after helping to establish the world's first socialist state, is not going anywhere and that the central hall where he lies in state will not be touched. But news of the temporary closure has seen long lines form to get into the mausoleum, with some visitors fearing it could be their last chance to see Lenin. "From a historical point of view, I want to witness his being in a mausoleum because I think Lenin will be buried at some point, maybe in the future or near future," said Tatyana Tolstik, a historian from Ulyanovsk, the city on the Volga where Lenin was born. A young woman called Snezhana, who did not give her surname, said she wanted to "dive into the past" because she was also unsure how long it would be possible to visit the mausoleum. The Communist Party, which ruled the country from the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, is fiercely opposed to the removal of Lenin's body, and Gennady Zyuganov, the party's veteran leader, has said President Vladimir Putin has assured him it will not happen on his watch. The Kremlin has repeatedly denied plans to permanently close the mausoleum. Standing in line, Olga Pavlova, from the town of Mirny, said today's generation of Russians had a lot to thank Lenin for. "I am on holiday and decided to show (the mausoleum) to my son and see it for myself," she said. "He (Lenin) is someone who changed our life in a very good way. Due to him, we have all the benefits that we have today. (For example,) education, healthcare, comfortable houses."