Xi ally named as new boss of China’s manufacturing heartland Guangdong
Pressure will be on former Liaoning party chief Li Xi, 61, to introduce progressive policies for regional integration, researcher says
Beijing named a new top official for the southern economic powerhouse of Guangdong on Saturday, one of a series of senior appointments to be made after the Communist Party’s leadership shake-up.
Li Xi, 61 – one of President Xi Jinping’s allies elevated to the 25-member Politburo on Wednesday – was named as the province’s party chief, succeeding Hu Chunhua, the official Xinhua news agency said in a brief report.
Li was previously party chief of northeastern Liaoning province and will be succeeded by its governor, Chen Qiufa.
Hu’s next role was not mentioned in the report. Once seen as a front runner for the supreme seven-member Politburo Standing Committee, Hu, 54, failed to make the cut but remains on the Politburo. He has, however, been tipped for a senior position within the Party Central or state apparatus.
Li’s promotion takes him from the rust-belt province of Liaoning, which had negative gross domestic product growth of minus 2.3 per cent in 2016, to the nation’s main export hub with a GDP that is more than three times the size of Liaoning’s.