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On Reflection | Opinion: Forget Mao Zedong, Xi Jinping is more Charles de Gaulle
Like the former French president, Xi has a ‘certain idea’ for his country and conflates domestic politics with his own thinking. Can he also reverse positions, like de Gaulle, and face down his own nationalists?
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The transformation of Xi Jinping is happening before our eyes. With the insertion of Xi Jinping Thought into the Communist Party’s constitution and the possibility that a quarter-century consensus on two-term leaders will be ended, it’s clear that China will be living with Xi for a long time to come. When trying to make comparisons, it’s Mao that comes to mind most naturally (not least as the term Lingxiu, last used for Mao, and before that for Chiang Kai-shek, is being revived for Xi). Vladimir Putin is another parallel. But let me offer another: the former French president, Charles de Gaulle.
WATCH: Xi Jinping Thought enshrined in the party charter
Of course, there was one other element of Gaullism that is echoed in Xi thought, and the clue is in the name: de Gaulle himself. De Gaulle essentially proposed loyalty to himself and his ideas as equivalent to patriotism. Xi’s name, along with his projects such as the Belt and Road Initiative, have been placed in the party constitution, making opposition to the Communist Party essentially equivalent to opposing Xi. De Gaulle refused to take up the presidency in 1958 unless the entire system was changed to give him maximum power, reducing the power of parliament. Xi has sought, and gained, centralised power as a response to a society which he thinks may fall apart from internal tensions. This recalls the way de Gaulle once reflected: “How can one rule any country that has 246 different types of cheese?” De Gaulle also mistrusted even supposed allies; the Americans despaired when he took France out of the Nato high command, and he repeatedly vetoed Britain’s attempts to join the EEC (the predecessor to the European Union). His foreign policy was his own; idiosyncratic and based on a powerful idea of his own rightness when it came to the fate of France.
Xi also runs a proud country with a long civilization that is unsure of its place in the world and purports to care little about what foreigners think of it. Like de Gaulle, he has made domestic politics co-terminous with his own thinking, and has removed or weakened rivals on his way to power. Unlike de Gaulle, he won’t allow liberal politics to thrive. But can he make the other de Gaulle gesture and surprise the world by reversing positions on a key interest?
WATCH: Xi Jinping’s principles of foreign policy
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