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𝙱𝚞𝚜𝚝𝚘𝚜び🇺🇸
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Tuesday 28 April 2026 12:43:47 GMT
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Imagine telling a Western politician the path to power requires twenty years of rotating between obscure positions in provinces where you know no one, being graded by superiors you didn't choose, trusting that an opaque committee will eventually decide whether you're ready. They would never agree. But that is exactly how Xi Jinping rose to power. Party secretary of Ningde, a coastal prefecture in Fujian. Then Fuzhou. Then governor of Fujian. Then Party secretary of Zhejiang. Then briefly Shanghai. Each posting outside his native Shaanxi. None required a public election. Every promotion was a decision made by superiors evaluating his dossier. The Organization Department was the body managing him. And every cadre in the system goes through the same machine. After entering through a competitive exam, you're sent to a county-level position far from your hometown. The OD doesn't let cadres serve at senior levels in their native provinces, a rule formalized in 1999 to prevent local power bases from forming. You're evaluated annually against a 100-point system. GDP growth. Tax revenue. Public order. Implementation of central policy. Your personnel file follows you for life. You will never see what's inside it. Every two or three years, you rotate again. The funnel narrows at every level. Of roughly 40 million cadres, maybe two million reach the leading cadre threshold. Of those, only a few thousand land on the central nomenklatura. 205 sit on the Central Committee. 24 on the Politburo. Seven on the Politburo Standing Committee. In Western terms, Xi was being managed up through a corporate ladder. The ladder happened to lead to control of 1.4 billion people.
Imagine telling a Western politician the path to power requires twenty years of rotating between obscure positions in provinces where you know no one, being graded by superiors you didn't choose, trusting that an opaque committee will eventually decide whether you're ready. They would never agree. But that is exactly how Xi Jinping rose to power. Party secretary of Ningde, a coastal prefecture in Fujian. Then Fuzhou. Then governor of Fujian. Then Party secretary of Zhejiang. Then briefly Shanghai. Each posting outside his native Shaanxi. None required a public election. Every promotion was a decision made by superiors evaluating his dossier. The Organization Department was the body managing him. And every cadre in the system goes through the same machine. After entering through a competitive exam, you're sent to a county-level position far from your hometown. The OD doesn't let cadres serve at senior levels in their native provinces, a rule formalized in 1999 to prevent local power bases from forming. You're evaluated annually against a 100-point system. GDP growth. Tax revenue. Public order. Implementation of central policy. Your personnel file follows you for life. You will never see what's inside it. Every two or three years, you rotate again. The funnel narrows at every level. Of roughly 40 million cadres, maybe two million reach the leading cadre threshold. Of those, only a few thousand land on the central nomenklatura. 205 sit on the Central Committee. 24 on the Politburo. Seven on the Politburo Standing Committee. In Western terms, Xi was being managed up through a corporate ladder. The ladder happened to lead to control of 1.4 billion people.

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