Li Qiang
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Li Qiang | |||
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李强 | |||
File:Chinese Premier Li Qiang May 2023.jpg
Li in May 2023
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8th Premier of the People's Republic of China | |||
Assumed office 11 March 2023 |
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Vice Premier | Ding Xuexiang He Lifeng Zhang Guoqing Liu Guozhong |
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Leader | Xi Jinping | ||
Preceded by | Li Keqiang | ||
Communist Party Secretary of Shanghai | |||
In office 29 October 2017 – 28 October 2022 |
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Deputy | Ying Yong (Mayor) Gong Zheng (Mayor) |
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General Secretary | Xi Jinping | ||
Preceded by | Han Zheng | ||
Succeeded by | Chen Jining | ||
Communist Party Secretary of Jiangsu | |||
In office 30 June 2016 – 29 October 2017 |
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Deputy | Shi Taifeng (Governor) Wu Zhenglong (Governor) |
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General Secretary | Xi Jinping | ||
Preceded by | Luo Zhijun | ||
Succeeded by | Lou Qinjian | ||
Governor of Zhejiang | |||
In office 21 December 2012 – 4 July 2016 Acting: 21 December 2012 – 30 January 2013 |
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Party Secretary | Xia Baolong | ||
Preceded by | Xia Baolong | ||
Succeeded by | Che Jun | ||
Personal details | |||
Born | July 1959 (age 65) Rui'an, Zhejiang, China |
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Political party | Chinese Communist Party | ||
Alma mater | Ningbo Branch of Zhejiang Agricultural University China Sociology Correspondence University Zhejiang University Central Party School Hong Kong Polytechnic University (EMBA) |
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Website | Premier of China's State Council | ||
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Li Qiang (Chinese: 李强; pinyin: Lǐ Qiáng; born July 1959) is a Chinese politician. He became the 8th premier of the People's Republic of China in March 2023, having been elevated to the second-ranking member on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Central Committee Politburo Standing Committee in October 2022. Li was the party secretary for Shanghai City from 2017 to 2022 where he pursued pro-business policies and handling the response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Li is considered part of the "New Zhijiang Army", the party faction of Xi Jinping, the party general secretary and paramount leader since 2012. The close relationship started in the mid-2000s when both held party positions in Zhejiang Province. Li is generally regarded by observers as pro-business and has voiced support for economic reforms.
Contents
Early life and education
Li was born in Rui'an, Zhejiang in July 1959. He was a worker in the Irrigation Pump Station of Mayu District, Rui'an County from 1976 to 1977, and worked in the Third Tool Factory of Rui'an from 1977 to 1978.[1]
Li Qiang studied agricultural mechanization at the Ningbo Branch of Zhejiang Agricultural University (now Zhejiang Wanli University) from 1978 to 1982 after the resumption of Gaokao. He studied sociology by correspondence at the private China Sociology Correspondence University (Chinese: {{{1}}}; defunct in 2021) in Beijing from 1985 to 1987.[1][2]
Li attended Zhejiang University for on-the-job graduate studies in management engineering from 1995 to 1997 and the Central Party School for on-the-job graduate studies in world economics from 2001 to 2004. He attended Hong Kong Polytechnic University from 2003 to 2005 and received an executive Master of Business Administration in 2005.[1]
Local leaderships
Zhejiang
Li joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in April 1983. He was the secretary of the Communist Youth League of Rui'an County. He then served in progressively senior roles in the provincial department of civil affairs. He later became the Communist Party secretary of the city of Yongkang, and then party secretary of the prefecture-level city of Wenzhou. By then he was only 43, and was the youngest party secretary of Wenzhou in history.[3] In 2004, Li became the secretary-general of Zhejiang's Provincial Party Committee and earned a seat on its Standing Committee in the next year, serving under then Zhejiang's party secretary, Xi Jinping, in charge of administration and coordination.[4] During this time, he became close to Xi, eventually being regarded as a close ally of him.[5] In February 2011, he became the Political and Legal Affairs Secretary of Zhejiang province, and several months later was made deputy party secretary.[1]
According to Guangming Daily in 2015, during his tenure in Zhejiang Li told a professor at the Zhejiang University that the province's local government needed an "independent think-tank like the RAND Corporation" to evaluate its performance, saying that it was "very difficult" for official organizations and officials to give objective analysis and criticize their superiors.[6] This led the professor to establish a non-governmental group of experts in 2009, with Li as its honorary director.[6]
After the 18th CCP National Congress, he became an alternate member of the CCP Central Committee. On December 21, 2012, he became the acting governor of Zhejiang, succeeding Xia Baolong who was promoted to the provincial party secretary, and was officially elected as governor on January 30, 2013.[4][7] He served as governor until July 4, 2016.[8] During his tenure in Zhejiang, he asked the non-governmental group of experts to write reports on his performance that "tell the truth", and later paid them a visit for a face-to-face feedback after feeling their first reports weren't critical enough.[6]
In 2014, when Zhejiang was preparing to hold an international internet conference, Li proposed that the host city turn into a pilot zone for unblocking China's strict internet controls for Western firms, an idea that was ultimately not approved by the central leadership.[9] He also started a project to create small towns that have a pro-business climate and good physical environments, a project endorsed and spread to rest of China by Xi.[9] The Economist reported in 2023 that "many such towns became speculative hotspots for housing developers".[6]
Jiangsu
In 2015, Li accompanied CCP leader Xi Jinping on a state visit to the United States. On June 30, 2016, Li was named party secretary of Jiangsu province.[10] He served for 15 months, becoming the shortest serving Jiangsu party secretary in the history of the People's Republic. During his tenure, he arranged meetings with business officials such as Jack Ma of Alibaba Group to encourage investments.[9]
Shanghai
On October 29, 2017, following the 19th Party Congress, Li was appointed as the party secretary of Shanghai.[1][11] He was also appointed as a member of the CCP Politburo in the same year. He is considered to be "business-friendly", having implemented pro-business policies while in Shanghai such as the opening of the Shanghai Stock Exchange STAR Market.[12][13] He oversaw increasing foreign investment in the city, including the gigafactory of Tesla, Inc.[14] He has also implemented policies like lowering the threshold for internal migrants to obtain residency permits and creating five new towns to lessen the land supply shortage.[14]
In 2022, Li was blamed for a two-month COVID-19 lockdown in Shanghai, which significantly impacted the economy.[15] Nevertheless, reportedly he was more open to the idea with living with COVID.[9] There were also views that Li was pressured from the Central leadership to implement a lockdown, and that initially, Li had adhered strictly to the guidelines of leading epidemiologists in China, including Zhang Wenhong, who maintained a 'flexible strategy' on anti-Covid measures.[16][17] It is also said that Li and Zhang had a good personal relationship, as the two were both from Rui'an, a city under the Wenzhou prefecture. According to The Wall Street Journal, Li is one of the few people in the top leadership that wants China to introduce Western mRNA vaccines against COVID-19. Reportedly, he tried to arrange for BioNTech to provide its vaccines in China.[9]
Premiership
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Following the 1st Plenary Session of the 20th CCP Central Committee, held after the closing day of the 20th Party Congress in October 2022, Li was appointed to the CCP Politburo Standing Committee as its second-ranking member.[18] Effectively putting him on track to become the premier, observers speculated that the lack of Central Government experience would make him heavily dependent on support from Xi to run the State Council.[19] On 28 October, he was succeeded by Chen Jining as the party secretary of Shanghai.[20] Reuters reported on 3 March 2023, citing sources, that Li pushed for the quick relaxation of zero-COVID rules in late 2022, resisting pressure from Xi, who wanted to slow the pace of the reopening. It also reported that Li had become the head of the CCP's COVID taskforce, and had also encouraged local governments to continue loosening COVID restrictions.[21]
Li took office as premier on 11 March during the first session of the 14th National People's Congress, taking over from Li Keqiang.[22] He is the first person since Zhou Enlai to rise directly to premiership from local government without any prior working experience in the central government, especially as a vice premier.[23][24]
Diplomacy
In April 2023, Li met with Japanese foreign minister Yoshimasa Hayashi in Beijing in order to improve ties.[25] In May, Li met with Russian prime minister Mikhail Mishustin, where he the "comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership between China and Russia in the new era", saying that bilateral trade between China and Russia had increased by 40% over the past year.[26] On 19 June 2023, Li started a trip to Germany, his first trip overseas as premier, where he met with president Frank-Walter Steinmeier, chancellor Olaf Scholz, as well as CEOs of large German companies such as Mercedes-Benz, SAP, and Siemens Energy.[27][28] After four days in Germany, he travelled to France on 21 June, where he met with French president Emmanuel Macron, prime minister Élisabeth Borne, as well as European Council president Charles Michel.[29]
Between 5 and 8 September, Li visited Jakarta, Indonesia, where he met with various ASEAN leaders. Li additionally met other leaders such as Australian prime minister Antony Albanese,[30] Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean president Yoon Suk-yeol[31] during various summits such as the ASEAN Plus Three summit[32] and the East Asia Summit.[33] Li Qiang also met with Indonesian president Joko Widodo, vowing $21.7 billion new Chinese investment in Indonesia.[34] Between 9 and 10 September, Li attended the G20 New Delhi summit, going in President Xi Jinping's place, who did not attend.[35] There, he met various leaders such as Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni,[36] President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen,[35] US president Joe Biden,[37] and British prime minister Rishi Sunak.[38]
Economy
Since becoming premier, Li has attempted to reassure private entrepreneurs and restore confidence after the damage caused be zero-COVID restrictions, lifted in late 2022, and regulatory campaigns undertaken by the government; he also reportedly persuaded Alibaba Group founder Jack Ma to return to China after he spent a year overseas.[39] on 27 March, he attended the China Development Forum, where he said that China will "unswervingly stick to opening up". He also met many foreign business executives, including Apple Inc. CEO Tim Cook and Ray Dalio of the Bridgewater Associates, who made their first trip to China since the zero-COVID policies ended.[40]
Political views
Economy and business
Li is seen as pro-business and supportive of economic reforms,[14][12][41] promoting private sector and service sector development.[42] According to The Economist, "[r]educing bureaucratic interference in the market is one of his favourite themes".[6] In 2003 during his tenure in Wenzhou, he said that "without the private economy, Wenzhou’s urban development would be set back by at least a century".[9] In 2014, Li said that "there should be more Alibabas and more Jack Mas". Li said in 2015 that economic reforms were a matter of "life and death" and that "the government cannot be an unlimited government." He also said that "to build a limited yet effective modern government, you need to transfer a lot of managerial power to social organizations."[41] According to The Wall Street Journal, Li has close ties with Jack Ma.[9] The newspaper also reported that Li suggested to the government to ease its regulatory actions against businesses and acted as a mediatory between businesses and the government during the government's crackdown on private businesses.[9] Li has also been supportive of innovation related to information technology and artificial intelligence, and has called for more focus for the "real economy".[42]
Personal life
Unusual in senior Chinese politics, Li has emphasized his local identity, namely his ties to Wenzhou. He set up the World Wenzhounese Conference to encourage members of the global Wenzhounese diaspora to invest back in the city, and told the conference in 2013 that "I was born and bred a Wenzhounese" and "[t]he Wenzhounese spirit of daring to be the first and especially of strong entrepreneurship has always inspired and nourished me".[6]
Li's wife is a retired civil servant, who previously worked in the transportation bureau of the Zhejiang provincial government. The couple have one daughter who studied in Australia.[41][42]
References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
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- New PM Li Qiang further boosts Zhejiang faction in CCP, Intelligence Online, March 17, 2023 (requires free registration)
Party political offices | ||
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Preceded by | Communist Party Secretary of Wenzhou 2002–2004 |
Succeeded by Wang Jianman (王建满) |
Preceded by
Zhang Xi (张曦)
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Secretary-General of the CCP Zhejiang Provincial Committee 2004–2012 |
Succeeded by Zhao Yide |
Preceded by | Secretary of the Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the CCP Zhejiang Provincial Committee 2011–2012 |
Succeeded by Wang Huizhong |
Preceded by | Deputy Communist Party Secretary of Zhejiang 2011–2012 |
Succeeded by Wang Huizhong |
Preceded by | Communist Party Secretary of Jiangsu 2016–2017 |
Succeeded by Lou Qinjian |
Preceded by | Communist Party Secretary of Shanghai 2017–2022 |
Succeeded by Chen Jining |
Government offices | ||
Preceded by | Governor of Zhejiang 2012–2016 |
Succeeded by Che Jun |
Preceded by | Premier of the State Council 2023–present |
Incumbent |
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