China | Chaguan

Why Xi Jinping is not another Chairman Mao

He is a strongman who wants to harness, not blow up, China’s deep state

EACH time President Xi Jinping grabs more powers, critics compare China’s leader to Chairman Mao Zedong, whose one-man rule led the country to disaster. Those grumblers may underestimate Mr Xi’s ambitions. Rather often, the charge that Mr Xi is emulating Mao—a despot whose campaigns of political terror and deranged economic policies left tens of millions dead—is a prediction that China’s leader is storing up trouble for himself, by weakening norms and institutions that might helpfully check and balance his authority. Such doomsayers are drawing lessons from Mao’s unhappy end. Over the two decades before his death in 1976, absolute power and a cult of personality left the Great Helmsman increasingly isolated and paranoid: a tyrant alienated from his most capable revolutionary comrades, military commanders and aides, many of whom were purged or driven to their deaths.

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “Xi Jinping is not another Mao”

From the April 8th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition
A group of Chinese hostesses at the opening session of the National Peopls's Congress in Beijing

China’s leaders reveal their plan to cope with 2025

Beating trade wars and deflation and boosting science are priorities

Two staff members prepare for the closing session of the 14th National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China on March 11th 2024

This week is a moment of truth for Xi Jinping on deflation

The budget will show how the Party plans to tackle the dangers China faces


Alice Weidel of Alternative fuer Deutschland

The AfD’s unusual China connection

Alice Weidel, leader of Germany’s AfD, spent six years in the People’s Republic


Who works where, doing what, in China

A surprising new census shows a workforce being transformed

Could there be Chinese troops in Europe?

China’s leaders now talk of “a window of opportunity for peace”