China: President Xi Jinping names confidant Li Qiang as premier

Appointment comes a day after Xi (69) secured a third five-year term as state leader

China's former premier, Li Keqiang (C), shakes hands with newly elected premier Li Qiang (R) as President Xi Jinping (L) looks on. Photograph; GREG BAKER/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
China's former premier, Li Keqiang (C), shakes hands with newly elected premier Li Qiang (R) as President Xi Jinping (L) looks on. Photograph; GREG BAKER/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Chinese president Xi Jinping has nominated Li Qiang (63) to become premier during the annual meeting of China’s ceremonial parliament.

Mr Li, a close confidant of Mr Xi, was appointed to the position with no dissenting voices at Saturday morning’s session of the National People’s Congress.

It came a day after Mr Xi (69) secured a third five-year term as state leader.

A two-term limit on the figurehead presidency was deleted from the Chinese constitution earlier, prompting suggestions he might stay in power for life.

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Mr Li is best known for having enforced a brutal zero-Covid lockdown on Shanghai last spring as party boss of the Chinese financial hub, proving his loyalty to Mr Xi in the face of complaints from residents over their lack of access to food, medical care and basic services.

Mr Li came to know Mr Xi during the future president’s term as head of Mr Li’s native Zhejiang, a relatively wealthy southeastern province now known as a technology and manufacturing powerhouse.

Prior to the pandemic, Mr Li built up a reputation in Shanghai and Zhejiang before that as friendly to private industry, even as Mr Xi enforced tighter political controls and anti-Covid curbs, as well as more control over ecommerce and other tech companies.

As premier, Mr Li will be charged with reviving a sluggish economy still emerging from the Covid-19 pandemic and confronted with weak global demand for exports, lingering US tariff hikes, a shrinking workforce and an ageing population.

He takes on the job as authority of the premier and the state council, China’s cabinet, has been steadily eroding as Mr Xi shifts more powers to bodies directly under the ruling Communist Party. – AP