[It is
palace intrigue by the sea. In their guarded villas, current and past leaders
will negotiate to try to place allies in the 25-member Politburo and its elite
Standing Committee, at the top of the party hierarchy. The selections will be
announced at the 18th Party Congress this fall in Beijing , heralding what is expected to be only the second orderly
leadership transition in more than 60 years of Communist rule.]
By Edward Wong And Jonathan Ansfield
“This man is a relative of Zhou Enlai,” the restaurant
manager said in a low voice to some foreign diners at a nearby table, referring
to the revered prime minister of China in the Mao era. “He’s come here before. He stays in the
neighborhood where the leaders live.”
In any other city, even Beijing , it would be unusual to casually run into a relative of
Mr. Zhou. But it is midsummer in Beidaihe, which means one thing: Communist
Party elders and their families are congregating here, about 180 miles east of Beijing , to swim and dine and gossip — and to shape the future of
the world’s most populous nation.
It is palace intrigue by the sea. In their guarded villas,
current and past leaders will negotiate to try to place allies in the 25-member
Politburo and its elite Standing Committee, at the top of the party hierarchy.
The selections will be announced at the 18th Party Congress this fall in Beijing , heralding what is expected to be only the second orderly
leadership transition in more than 60 years of Communist rule.
“This is where the factional struggles are settled and the
decisions are made,” said one resident, surnamed Li, who, like others
interviewed for this article, spoke on the condition of anonymity because of
the delicate nature of Chinese politics. “At the meetings in the fall, everyone
just raises their hands.”
Beidaihe is a Chinese combination of the Jersey Shore and Martha’s
Vineyard , with a pinch of red
fervor: the hilly streets and public beaches are packed with shirtless Russians
and Chinese families, while the party elites remain hidden in their villas and
on their private patches of sand. A clock tower near Kiessling chimes “The East
is Red,” a classic Mao anthem.
The security presence has surged in recent weeks. Police
officers in light blue uniforms patrol on Suzuki motorcycles and stand on
street corners watching for jaywalkers. They have set up a checkpoint on the
main road leading into town.
The informal talks are expected to start late this month
and run into August, continuing a tradition that went into partial eclipse
after China ’s top leader, President Hu Jintao, took over from Jiang Zemin in
2002, and ordered party and government offices to stop more formal operations
from the seaside during the summer palaver. But Mr. Jiang reportedly chafed at
that and continued hobnobbing here with his allies. There was a notable
conclave here in 2007 that Mr. Hu attended, to pave the way for the 17th Party
Congress, according to scholars and a State Department cable disclosed by
WikiLeaks.
In any case, politicking is inevitable when party elders
show up to escape the stifling heat and pollution of Beijing .
Westerners began building up Beidaihe as a summer retreat
in the late 19th century, as the Qing dynasty waned. When the People’s
Liberation Army entered in 1948, the resort had 719 villas, according to China
Daily, a state-run English-language newspaper.
Communist leaders began vacationing here. Mao was an avid
swimmer and dove eagerly into the waters of the Bohai Sea . He convened formal conclaves here. His successor, Deng
Xiaoping, made the meetings into annual events (he also took swims, supposedly
to counter rumors of his ailing health).
The most infamous event at Beidaihe involved Lin Biao, a
Communist marshal whom Mao accused of plotting a coup. On Sept. 13, 1971 , after the coup attempt was supposedly discovered, Mr. Lin
fled his villa here with his wife and a son and boarded a plane at the local
airport. Their destination was the Soviet
Union , but the plane crashed in Mongolia , killing everyone on board.
There are plots and counterplots this year, too.
Negotiations here will be complicated by the continuing scandal over Bo Xilai,
the deposed Politburo member who was most recently party chief of Chongqing . Some political observers had expected that by now the
party would have concluded the investigation into Mr. Bo and his wife, who is
suspected of killing a British businessman. Several people with high-level
party ties say that Mr. Bo, who is being held in secret and without charges, is
fighting back against interrogators, and that party leaders are having a
difficult time deciding how to resolve his case.
During the negotiations, each current Standing Committee
member should, at least in theory, have considerable say in determining the
successor to his particular post. But party elders behind the scenes sometimes
wield more authority. Mr. Jiang, though retired and ailing last year, may carry
the greatest weight next to that of Mr. Hu. The heir apparent, Vice President Xi Jinping, also plays a role.
“Consensus among these three — the former, current and
incoming leaders — is extremely important,” said Zhang Xiaojin, a political
scientist at Tsinghua University in Beijing .
A flurry of activity in recent months has laid the
groundwork. In May, more than 300 senior cadres were asked at a meeting to list
the officials they thought should make the Politburo Standing Committee, where
all the seats are in play except for the top two. Those are expected to go to
Mr. Xi and Li Keqiang, who is slated to take over as prime minister.
Polling of senior party members was also done before the
2007 congress. Such surveys are intended as reference points only, though they
have become increasingly important. Talk is swirling in Beijing over the results of the May polling. One member of the
party elite said several people associated with Mr. Hu’s political base did not
do well. Two insiders said one person who ranked high was Wang Qishan, a vice
prime minister who oversees the financial sector.
Party leaders are considering reducing the number of
Standing Committee seats to seven from nine, as was the case as recently as
2002, many insiders say. Mr. Hu is believed to support the change, which is in
part aimed at curbing the entrenchment of interest groups at the top. That
could mean taking two portfolios — probably propaganda and one dubbed “politics
and law” that encompasses domestic security — and either adding them to the
duties of other leaders or downgrading them to the Politburo level.
“With fewer people, they can concentrate power and increase
their efficiency,” said one official at a state news media organization.
But there are other possible motives. The rapid expansion
of security powers under Zhou Yongkang, the current Standing Committee member
who heads the politics and law committee and supported Mr. Bo, has alarmed some
party leaders, political analysts say. Since assuming the post in 2007, Mr.
Zhou has capitalized on Mr. Hu’s focus on stability to build up the security
apparatus, whose budget this year is officially $111 billion, $5 billion more
than the military budget.
“The politics and law apparatus has grown too powerful,” an
intelligence official said. “A lot of us feel this way.”
A contraction of the Standing Committee could also hurt
those vying for seats who are not among the very top candidates, most notablyWang Yang, the
party chief of Guangdong Province , who cultivates a progressive image.
The size and structure of the leadership have been a matter
of continuing discussion. One analyst with ties to officials involved in party
planning said that at the May meeting, cadres were also asked to submit their
views on changing the composition of the party’s upper echelons, in a glimpse
of what may be called intraparty democracy. Though few changes were expected
anytime soon, “a lot of people had very different ideas,” he said.
Those debates are remote from the lives of most people in
Beidaihe. Yet talk of politics flows loosely here. At a beach reserved for
local officials, next to an almost-deserted patch of sand blocked off for party
leaders, a retired official in swim trunks pointed to the villas across the
road. He said the children of party leaders had made off with too much money
through corrupt practices in state industries.
Emblematic of the distance between officials and those they
rule, he said, is the fact that the party leaders vacationing here nowadays
refuse to go into the sea, which is brown from runoff. Ordinary people swim in
those waters, but the leaders take dips in swimming pools, including one built
recently that is filled with filtered seawater.
“What are they good for?” the retired official asked. “What
did they inherit from their fathers? They should have inherited the solidarity
of the revolution.”
Patrick Zuo and Clare Pennington contributed
research from Beijing .