China's anti-corruption drive snares 65 tigers in 2025

The People's Daily published a front-page editorial on Saturday stressing that self-reform and anti-corruption efforts are key to ensuring the longevity of the Communist Party's rule in China, echoing Xi Jinping's New Year's address. It stated, 'A new year, a new journey begins,' urging intensified discipline in the coming years.

In a front-page editorial on Saturday, the People's Daily stressed that self-reform and anti-corruption efforts were key to ensuring the longevity of the party's rule over China. 'A new year, a new journey begins,' the party mouthpiece said, urging intensified discipline in the coming years.

Echoing Xi's New Year's address, it said the party must continue to answer questions about China's long-term governance – questions that were raised and answered during the 'cave-dwelling dialogue' between Mao Zedong and educator Huang Yanpei in 1945. In that conversation, which took place at the party's revolutionary base in Yanan, Mao told Huang and a group of visiting intellectuals that China should rely on the people's supervision of the government to escape the cycle of rise and fall that had brought down past dynasties.

Xi expanded on this answer in 2021 during a plenary session of the party's Central Committee. He said the party had found the second answer to ensuring long-term governance: 'self-reform', or maintaining the party's integrity through strict internal governance.

The editorial comes as China's anti-corruption crackdown snared a record 65 'tigers' – high-ranking officials – in 2025. Keywords associated include the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, China Securities Regulatory Commission, He Weidong, Communist Party, Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, All-China Women's Federation, Jiang Chaoliang, Politburo, Qizhala, Zhang Shiping, Central Military Commission, Chen Weijun, Inner Mongolia, Xi Jinping, and Bank of China, likely linked to those investigated.

This drive underscores the party's ongoing commitment to discipline to sustain its rule.

Artigos relacionados

Xi Jinping speaks at the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection plenary session, urging stricter Party self-governance and anti-corruption measures.
Imagem gerada por IA

Xi Jinping calls for advancing Party self-governance with higher standards

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

On January 12, 2026, Xi Jinping addressed the fifth plenary session of the 20th Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, urging higher standards and more concrete measures to advance full and rigorous Party self-governance while intensifying anti-corruption efforts to support the 15th Five-Year Plan.

The South China Morning Post has launched a series exploring Beijing’s progress in defusing financial risks and rooting out political corruption, along with what remains to be done. The series covers steady stock market growth, anti-corruption in academia, and financial influence.

Reportado por IA

Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered his 2026 New Year message in Beijing on December 31, 2025, via China Media Group and the internet. He reviewed achievements from 2025 and outlined prospects for high-quality development in 2026.

China's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection announced an investigation into Guo Yonghang, protégé of senior official Ma Xingrui, for "serious violations of discipline and law." The move deepens the mystery around Ma, the former Guangdong governor and Xinjiang party chief who has not appeared publicly for months. Guo, 60, was named vice-chairman of Guangdong's CPPCC committee in January.

Reportado por IA

Chinese leaders convened in Beijing on December 10-11 for the annual Central Economic Work Conference, where Xi Jinping delivered a keynote speech reviewing 2025 economic performance, assessing challenges, and outlining 2026 priorities. The meeting emphasized boosting domestic demand, fostering innovation, deepening reforms, and expanding opening-up to promote high-quality development.

Beijing has introduced a new 'invest in people' slogan as part of its 15th five-year plan proposal, aiming to stimulate domestic demand by bolstering investments in welfare, pensions, education, and public services. Analysts view this as a rethink of economic strategy to address structural challenges like weak domestic demand and persistent deflationary pressures.

Reportado por IA

China's leadership draws the most urgent lesson of modern military power from its own history books, not foreign manuals. To Beijing, the true foundation of an effective military lies not only in advanced technology but also in institutional integrity. History teaches that material investments must be translated into real warfighting capability, a lesson China is resolved to learn.

sexta-feira, 03 de abril de 2026, 13:56h

Ma Xingrui becomes third Politburo member investigated for corruption

quarta-feira, 11 de março de 2026, 19:45h

China's two sessions 2026: Li Qiang outlines economy and tech priorities

quarta-feira, 04 de março de 2026, 08:33h

China vows deeper opening-up for steady economic growth

quarta-feira, 04 de março de 2026, 01:50h

China's 'two sessions' open to deliberate 15th Five-Year Plan

quinta-feira, 26 de fevereiro de 2026, 20:56h

China shifts cadre appraisal away from pure GDP growth

quinta-feira, 19 de fevereiro de 2026, 06:57h

Corruption cases raise questions about golden age of Chinese think tanks

segunda-feira, 16 de fevereiro de 2026, 14:11h

Chinese journalists released on bail after accusing official of corruption

sexta-feira, 13 de fevereiro de 2026, 10:54h

Chinese leaders extend Spring Festival greetings to retired officials

domingo, 08 de fevereiro de 2026, 01:20h

China's military command tightens discipline for top generals

sexta-feira, 06 de fevereiro de 2026, 05:44h

China’s military vows to improve training scrutiny after Zhang Youxia’s fall

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar