Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Xi Jinping 'President for Life': Chinese Parliament Votes to Abolish Presidential Term-Limits

Xi Jinping 'President for Life': Chinese Parliament Votes to Abolish Presidential Term-Limits
(Twitter / Lintao Zhang/Getty Images)

The world officially gains another autocrat.

Delegates of the National People's Congress voted almost unanimously to end presidential term limits on Sunday, enabling Chinese President Xi Jinping to remain in office indefinitely.


The vote ends the two-term limit for Chinese presidents, thanks to the nearly 3,000 members of China's legislative body. An astonishing 2,958 members of Chinese parliament voted 'yes.' Only two lawmakers voted in the negative, and three abstained. This overturns China's previous constitutional rule, ratified with their Constitution in 1982, which limited presidents to serving two five-year terms. Like the 22nd Amendment to the U.S Constitution, China imposed term limits on its presidents because it feared leaders remaining in power indefinitely was a recipe for tyranny.

Giphy

Bloomberg Asia made a video about President Xi's rise to power.

Technically speaking, Chinese presidents have limited powers as heads of state, unlike American presidents who not only manage a branch of government, but also lead the military. Chinese presidents can declare war and states of emergency, although unlike their American counterparts, don't typically directly influence lawmaking, Chinese presidents' political power is limited in scope. The general secretary of the Communist Party sets domestic and foreign policy and controls the military and domestic security agencies. As figureheads, China's presidents are the country's chief emissaries to the world.

Giphy

"This difference is reflected in language. In Chinese, China's president is called "zhuxi," which really translates as "chairman." Foreign presidents get a different title, "zongtong.," wrote Chris Buckley and Adam Wu in the New York Times. "So in effect, Chinese people are referring to Mr. Xi as the "state chairman," though in English his title is officially translated as "state president" to put him on an even footing with other world leaders."

Though the Chinese presidency is itself limited, Xi also serves as head of the Communist Party and leader of the military. Neither of these posts have term limits, and it's this technicality that Chinese officials used to justify their vote to further consolidate Xi's power. Presidential term limits were enacted to prevent one person from wielding unlimited, unending power.

Giphy

China remains the main intermediary between the United States and North Korea, so it's not too surprising that President Donald Trump actually praised and congratulated Xi for what appeared to be an inevitable vote in his favor. "He's now president for life. President for life. No, he's great," Trump said. "And look, he was able to do that. I think it's great. Maybe we'll have to give that a shot some day." Oddly, his comments were met with applause by conservative supporters.

Giphy

Trump's supporters insist his comments about ending presidential term limits in the United States were a joke, but Trump has a habit of admiring and palling around with authoritarian leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte, and Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, whom last year was granted an enormous expansion of presidential power.

Giphy

Trump appears unaware, or just willfully ignorant, of the fact that until the ratification of the 22nd Amendment in 1947, United States presidents were not bound by term limits. Our 32nd president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was elected to four terms, though he died of polio complications on April 12, 1945, eight days shy of three months into his fourth term.

More from People/donald-trump

Sir Michael Caine
Mike Marsland/WireImage

Michael Caine Cryptically Tweeted The Word 'Jet'—And The Jokes Came Flying In

Legendary Oscar winner Sir Michael Caine may be 92 years old, but he's no less a social media maven than the young people among us. In fact, he might even be better at it than the youths!

What makes him so good at the social media game is the way he gets right to the point with as few words as possible.

Keep Reading Show less
Mike Malott and Charles Radtke during UFC match
Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

U.S. UFC Star Threatens Canada For Booing Anthem—Then Gets His A** Handed To Him

UFC fighter Charles Radtke was widely mocked online after talking trash about Canada before his bout with Canadian fighter Mike Malott—only to be soundly defeated by Malott in the second round.

Radtke leaned into the role of the villain leading up to the fight, invoking President Donald Trump’s talk of annexing Canada as the “51st state” and saying he was seeking revenge for Canadian hockey fans recently booing the U.S. national anthem.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Brian Jack talking to high school students
@patriottakes/X

High School Group Asks MAGA Rep. Why Trump Looks 'So Orange'—And His Answer Is Awkward AF

Things sure got awkward for Georgia Republican Representative Brian Jack after a group of students asked him during a Q&A session why President Donald Trump is "so orange."

People can only speculate what brand of makeup or bronzer Trump uses on a daily basis but there's a reason why he's been nicknamed "the orange man," "Agent Orange," and even "Mango Mussolini"—the color of his face is really, really hard to miss given he's photographed all the time.

Keep Reading Show less
Sean Duffy
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Transportation Secretary Slammed After Admitting He Made A Telling Switch To Wife's Recent Flight

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was criticized after admitting in a recent audio clip that he'd just switched his wife's Newark Liberty International Airport flight to one out of LaGuardia Airport—despite previously claiming his family flies out of Newark Airport "all the time."

Duffy’s remarks came as staffing shortages caused major flight disruptions at Newark on Monday, with the F.A.A. forced to delay incoming flights from across the continental U.S. and parts of Canada. According to an online advisory, delays averaged over 1 hour and 40 minutes and in some cases stretched to nearly seven hours.

Keep Reading Show less
tourists on stairs leading to cathedral
Ilnur Kalimullin on Unsplash

People Share The Things They Consider 'Normal' In Their Country That Would Shock Tourists

What's normal but a setting on the clothes dryer?

What we label "normal" would often be best described as "common." Normal is defined as "conforming to a standard" or "the usual, average, or typical state or condition."

Keep Reading Show less