China
State vs. Students: Why Marxism Troubles Xi Jinping
29 Jan, 2019 · 5549
Palden Sonam examines why the Communist Party of China is actively repressing young communists in the country for practising what the Party has for long preached through its ideologically greased education system.
In
theory, Marxism has for long been the ideological foundation of the Communist
Party of China’s (CPC) regime. In practice, however, while Marxism is employed
as an instrument of Party rule, its principles are not. Under China’s President
Xi Jinping in particular, a new lease of life has been injected into
ideological propaganda to garnish the increasing re-partification of the state
and society.
In
May 2018, during a commemoration of the 200thanniversary of Karl
Marx’s birth, Xi hailed Marx as the “greatest thinker of modern time” whose ideas inspired a society
free of oppression and exploitation. The study of Marxism is actively promoted
from classrooms in the hinterland to the corridors of power in Beijing. Television shows, rap music and cartoon series have been launched to make communism, cool, and Marx, modern—especially
for China’s tech-savvy millennials. This new push for ideological studies also
includes the ‘Xi Jinping Thought’—described by the party’s chief ideological
theoretician as the “Marxism of modern China.”
Therefore,
in this atmosphere of renewed love for Marx, the government’s reaction to the
activities of young Marxists in China is particularly intriguing. In August
2018, 40 Marxist students who came to support workers to form a union in
Shenzhen disappeared after they were raided by authorities. In China, barring the Party controlled All-China
Federation of Trade Unions, no other union is permitted to exist. In November
2018, authorities detained over a dozen students from premiere
universities across the country in a seemingly coordinated effort to clampdown
on labour related activities. The latest offensive on Marxists in China took
place in December 2018 coinciding with Mao Zedong’s 120th birth
anniversary, when the head of Marxist Society at Peking University was bundled
into a black car while on his way to attend a memorial for the very founder of
People’s Republic.
These
incidents beg the question: why does the Party treat young communists with
disdainful repression for practising what the Party has for long been preaching
via its ideologically greased education system?
Primarily,
the activism of the young Marxists makes evident the fact that the Party hides
and seeks its interests using the facade of Marxism. Despite the Party’s lofty
rhetoric, labourers (especially migrant workers) live and work in substandard conditions.
The students’ attempts to advocate the case of the labourers embarrassingly
exposes the gap between official rhetoric and ground realities in the country.
For the authorities, this represents a bigger threat to their power than the
formation of a small union as the former exposes their hypocrisy, whereas the
latter is a negligible challenge.
Secondly,
the Party is also apprehensive of the organised nature of activities, particularly
by students, given the memory of the 1989 students movement whose 30th
anniversary (June 2019) is fast approaching. Additionally, the authorities are
aware of the students’ ability to mobilise in the age of social media.
Moreover, the political price of a violent suppression of any student movement is
likely to prove costly. In this context, the regime seems to be frantically dousing
any emerging sparks of discontentment before they transform into a bigger flames
like 1989. It is due to such considerations that the Party is aggressively targeting
the activities of the young Marxists notwithstanding the latter’s appeals to
working class consciousness.
The CPC
is not Marxist in the true sense of the term and the so called Sinicisation of
Marxism is hardly a justification for its disregard for the core principles of Marxism.
Since inducting the super-rich into its membership in 2002 under Jiang Zemin,
the Party has become club of billionaires and millionaires. At present, the higher
rungs of the pyramid of power include over 100 billionaires as members and/or advisors to the CPC leadership.
The nexus between the powerful and wealthy changed the Party from being a mass
party to an elite party with less emphasis on revolution and more on
self-aggrandisement. The students’ attention to and advocacy regarding the
hardships of workers highlights the Party’s failure to address the grievances
of the proletariat and peasants who paid the most for China’s economic miracle
in terms of their lands and labours but gained the least from the ensuing development.
Despite
Xi’s loud calls of Marxism’s relevance to China’s present and future under the Party’s
guidance, the rift between the rhetoric of Marxism and reality in China has never
been clearer. With its omnipresence in every aspect of the Chinese society, the
Party is free to interpret and employ Marxism depending on circumstances because
it enjoys the exclusive right to choose an ideology and
its interpretation in the country.
However,
the recent crackdowns have not been without international backlash. For
instance, in October 2018, Cornell University suspended exchange programmes with Renmin University on account of the latter’s
failure to respect the academic freedom of its students. In another case, in
November 2018, over 30 scholars including Noam Chomsky announced their boycott of Marxism conferences in China arguing that their participation would make
them complicit in the state’s clampdown on Marxist students.
Overall,
from Mao to Xi, whether it is due to the faction-ridden nature of Chinese
politics or a lack of genuine interest in Marxism, Party leaders have been more
Machiavellian than Marxist; and they view the preservation of Party’s
dictatorship as imperative for the preservation of their own power within the Party.