Editorial | New journey by Xi to build on foundations laid by reformer Jiang
- As China moves forward, the legacy of Jiang Zemin will prove invaluable for President Xi Jinping, who faces challenges equal to those overcome by his predecessor
A measure of a departed leader is how relevant he remains in terms of the present and the future. President Xi Jinping answered that question about predecessor Jiang Zemin in the affirmative in his address at Jiang’s memorial service in the Great Hall of the People yesterday.
Xi’s theme was that this is a time to move forward by building on the opening up and reform that defined his legacy. Jiang became leader of the Communist Party in 1989 with China at the crossroads and facing international isolation following the June 4 crackdown on democracy protesters, and the danger of turning inward and giving up on reform.
Under the initial guidance of then paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, the architect of reform, Jiang pushed on with opening up that generated soaring economic growth through trade with the outside world, thanks to demand for Chinese-made goods.
He retired in 2002 with China having joined the World Trade Organization, won the right to stage the summer Olympics and resumed sovereignty over Hong Kong and Macau, among many other signposts of international respect and acceptance.
Xi gave Jiang credit for modernising reform that widened party membership to include entrepreneurs. Having paid tribute to his major contributions, Xi made it clear the country has now embarked on a new journey in a new era to transform a moderately prosperous country into a powerful nation.
It is a mission for which Jiang helped lay the foundations. It amounts to inheriting and harnessing the spirit of the past to venture into the future.