China goes beyond the party for key post
Chinas government has appointed a second non-Communist cabinet minister as the party seeks to burnish its reformist credentials before this years five-yearly congress and next years Beijing Olympic Games. French-trained scientist Chen Zhu, 54, was named health minister, handing him a difficult and sensitive portfolio at a time when the sector is debating extensive reform.
But the manner of Mr Chens appointment underlined the limits of his real powers, even as a minister in theory, the top job in the health bureaucracy. In a puzzling move, Gao Qiang, the present minister, was retained both as a vice-minister and as the secretary of the ministrys Communist party committee, meaning he will continue to outrank the minister.
Not being a party member, Mr Chen will be ineligible to attend the ministrys party meetings, creating a potentially awkward relationship with other officials.
Won't be awkward at all. He'll do as he's told. | Lacking party status and networks, he will also struggle to impose his own agenda on the ministry.
He won't have an agenda to impose. | Mr Chens appointment follows that of Wan Gang, a German-trained engineer who worked at Audi for many years who was made science minister this year.
As the party and its 70m-plus members control every other significant government post in the country, the ministerial appointments represent a symbolic rather than a substantive change. But such appointments do point to the partys rising sensitivity about its absolute monopoly on political power. The five-yearly congress, scheduled for late October, will choose the new top leadership, a process that has traditionally taken place out of sight of the public.
Is the Financial Times this clueless on the meaning of a 'figurehead'? |
Posted by: lotp 2007-06-30 |