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The lower-stakes moments when China’s top lawmakers show their hand

A string of candidates for the legislature’s Standing Committee came in for some strong opposition on Sunday

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National People’s Congress delegates line up to cast their ballots at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday. Photo: Bloomberg
Jun Maiin Beijing

Most of the time China’s top legislature, the National People’s Congress, goes along with the Communist Party and endorses its major decisions with an overwhelming majority.

But there are times when the 2,000 or so lawmakers are more willing to exercise their preferences.

A case in point is deciding who gets to sit on the NPC’s 159-member Standing Committee, which meets in between the full legislature’s annual sessions.

On Sunday, one group of the 170 candidates in the running for the seats were the recipients of a particularly high proportion of no votes from legislators: the leaders of the anticorruption campaign in the military.

Lieutenant General Yang Chengxi, deputy discipline chief of the People’s Liberation Army since 2016, stood out for the 400-plus votes in opposition to his candidacy.

Yang is one of the “top guns” Beijing has deployed in a far-reaching campaign that its supporters claim has felled “more generals than war”.

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