Chinese President Zemin remembered for leading China on world stage

Former Chinese President Jiang Zemin, who died Wednesday, led communist China through massive economic growth and globalization. Known for his charisma and stability doctrine, his death comes as the current government faces widespread protests and unrest. 

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Hector Mata/AP/File
Jiang Zemin (center) waves at a dinner hosted by the Southern California Chinese American Community in Los Angeles, Nov. 2, 1997. The influential political leader, who died Wednesday at age 96, saw China through history-making changes.

Jiang Zemin, who died Wednesday, led China out of isolation after the army crushed the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests in 1989 and supported economic reforms that led to a decade of explosive growth. He was president for a decade until 2003 and led the ruling Communist Party for 13 years until 2002. 

His death comes after the party faced its most widespread public show of opposition in decades when crowds called for leader Xi Jinping to resign during weekend protests of anti-virus controls that are confining millions of people to their homes. 

Making a surprise choice to lead a divided Communist Party after the 1989 turmoil, Mr. Jiang saw China through history-making changes including a revival of market-oriented reforms, the return of Hong Kong from British rule in 1997, and Beijing’s entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001.

Even as China opened to the outside, Mr. Jiang’s government stamped out dissent. It jailed human rights, labor, and pro-democracy activists and banned the Falun Gong spiritual movement, which the ruling party saw as a threat to its monopoly on power.

Mr. Jiang gave up his last official title in 2004 but remained a force behind the scenes in wrangling that led to the rise of Mr. Xi, who took power in 2012. Mr. Xi has tightened political control, crushed China’s little remaining dissent, and reasserted the dominance of state industry.

Chinese state TV devoted 48 minutes of an extended evening news broadcast to Mr. Jiang’s death. He was shown chatting with farmers, touring factories, and meeting foreign leaders.

The party declared him a “great proletarian revolutionary” and “long-tested communist fighter.” 

Mr. Jiang was responsible for China “getting onto a global platform and rehabilitating itself after 1989,” said Kerry Brown, a Chinese politics expert at King’s College London. “He will be remembered as someone who made probably a pretty positive contribution.”

Rumors that Mr. Jiang might be in poor health spread after he missed a ruling party congress in October at which Mr. Xi, China’s most powerful figure since at least the 1980s, broke with tradition and awarded himself a third five-year term as leader.

Mr. Jiang was on the verge of retirement as the party secretary for Shanghai in 1989 when he was drafted by then-paramount leader Deng Xiaoping to pull together the party and nation. He succeeded Zhao Ziyang, who was dismissed by Mr. Deng due to his sympathy for the student-led Tiananmen protesters.

In 13 years as party general secretary, China’s most powerful post, Mr. Jiang guided the country’s rise to economic power by welcoming capitalists into the party and pulling in foreign investment after China joined the WTO. China passed Germany and then Japan to become the second-largest economy after the United States.

Mr. Jiang captured a political prize when Beijing was picked as the site of the 2008 Summer Olympics after failing in an earlier bid.

Portly and owlish in oversize glasses, Mr. Jiang was an ebullient figure who played the piano and enjoyed singing, in contrast to his more reserved successors, Hu Jintao and Mr. Xi.

He spoke enthusiastic if halting English and would recite the Gettysburg Address for foreign visitors. On a visit to Britain, he tried to coax Queen Elizabeth II into singing karaoke.

A former soap factory manager, Mr. Jiang capped his career with the communist era’s first orderly succession, handing over his post as party leader in 2002 to Mr. Hu, who also took the ceremonial title of president the following year. 

Still, he was said to be frustrated that Mr. Deng picked Mr. Hu, blocking Mr. Jiang from installing his own successor. Mr. Jiang tried to hold onto influence by staying on as chairman of the Central Military Commission, which controls the 2 million-member People’s Liberation Army. He gave up that post in 2004 following complaints he might divide the government.

After leaving office, Mr. Jiang had influence over promotions through his network of proteges. He was considered successful in elevating allies to the party’s seven-member Standing Committee, China’s inner circle of power, when Mr. Xi became leader in 2012.

Mr. Jiang faded from view and last appeared publicly alongside current and former leaders atop Beijing’s Tiananmen Gate at a 2019 military parade celebrating the party’s 70th anniversary in power.

Mr. Jiang was born Aug. 17, 1926, in the affluent eastern city of Yangzhou. Official biographies downplay his family’s middle-class background, emphasizing instead his uncle and adoptive father, Jiang Shangqing, an early revolutionary who was killed in battle in 1939.

After graduating from the electrical machinery department of Jiaotong University in Shanghai in 1947, Mr. Jiang advanced through the ranks of state-controlled industries, working in a food factory, then soap-making, and China’s biggest automobile plant.

Like many technocratic officials, Mr. Jiang spent part of the ultra-radical 1966-76 Cultural Revolution as a farm laborer. His career revived after that, and in 1983, he was named minister of the electronics industry, then a key but backward sector the government hoped to revive by inviting foreign investment.

As mayor of Shanghai between 1985 and 1989, Mr. Jiang impressed foreign visitors as a representative of a new breed of outward-looking Chinese leaders.

A tough political fighter, Mr. Jiang defied predictions that his stint as leader would be short. He consolidated power by promoting members of his “Shanghai faction” and giving the military double-digit annual percentage increases in spending.

Foreign leaders and CEOs who shunned Beijing after the Tiananmen crackdown were persuaded to return.

When Mr. Deng emerged from retirement in 1992 to push for reviving market-style reform, Mr. Jiang also took up the cause.

He supported Premier Zhu Rongji, the party’s No. 3 leader, who forced through painful changes that slashed as many as 40 million jobs from state industry in the late 1990s.

Mr. Zhu launched the privatization of urban housing, igniting a building boom that transformed Chinese cities into forests of high-rises and propelled economic growth.

After 12 years of negotiations and a flight by Mr. Zhu to Washington to lobby the Clinton administration for support, China joined the WTO in 2001, cementing its position as a magnet for foreign investment.

China’s economic boom split society into winners and losers as waves of rural residents migrated to factory jobs in cities, the economy grew sevenfold, and urban incomes grew by nearly as much.

Protests, once rare, spread as millions lost state jobs and farmers complained about rising taxes and fees. Divorce rates climbed. Corruption flourished.

Despite a genial public image, Mr. Jiang dealt severely with challenges to ruling party power.

His highest-profile target was Falun Gong, a meditation group founded in the early 1990s. Chinese leaders were spooked by its ability to attract tens of thousands of followers, including military officers.

Activists who tried to form an opposition China Democracy Party, a move permitted by Chinese law, were sentenced to up to 12 years in prison on subversion charges.

“Stability above all else,” Mr. Jiang ordered, in a phrase his successors have used to justify intensive social controls.

It fell to Mr. Jiang, standing beside Britain’s Prince Charles, to preside over the return of Hong Kong on July 1, 1997, symbolizing the end of 150 years of European colonialism. The nearby Portuguese territory of Macao was returned to China in 1999.

Hong Kong was promised autonomy and became a springboard for mainland companies that want to do business abroad. Meanwhile, Mr. Jiang turned to coercion with Taiwan, the self-ruled island Beijing says is part of its territory.

During Taiwan’s first direct presidential election in 1996, Mr. Jiang’s government tried to intimidate voters by firing missiles into nearby shipping lanes. The United States responded by sending warships to the area in a show of support.

At the same time, trade between the mainland and Taiwan grew to billions of dollars a year.

One of Mr. Jiang’s sons, Jiang Mianheng, courted controversy as a telecommunications dealmaker in the late 1990s, when critics accused him of misusing his father’s status to promote his career, a common complaint against the children of party leaders.

Mr. was 96. He is survived by his two sons and his wife, Wang Yeping, who worked in government bureaucracies in charge of state industries.

This story was reported by The Associated Press. 

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