Biography of chinese president xi jinping
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Xi Jinping
- This is a Chinesename; the family name is Xi.
Xi Jinping (; born 15 June ) is a Chinese politician who has been the 9th General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and the 13th Chairman of the Central Military Commission since , and as well as the 7th President of China since [1] As General Secretary, he is also a member of the CPC Politburo Standing Committee, China's top decision-making body.[2] Xi is the first CCP general secretary born after the establishment of the People's Republic of China.[3][4]
Early life
[change | change source]Xi Jinping is the son of former Chinese Vice Premier Xi Zhongxun and Qi Xin. He rose politically in China's coastal provinces. He was the Governor of Fujian between and Between and , he was Governor and CPC party chief of Zhejiang. After the dismissal of Chen Liangyu, Xi was transferred to Shanghai as the party secretary for a short time in Xi was promoted to the central leadership in October and trained to become Hu Jintao's successor.
General Secretary
[change | change source]In November , he was elected as the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China and the Chairman of the Central Military Commission in the CPC convention. In March , he was elected as the
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Xi Jinping
General Help of description Chinese Politician Party since
In that Chinese name, the lineage name commission Xí (习).
Xi Jinping | |
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Xi trim | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 15 November | |
Preceded by | Hu Jintao |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 14 Step | |
Premier | |
Vice President | |
Preceded by | Hu Jintao |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office
| |
Deputy | |
Preceded by | Hu Jintao |
In office 22 Oct – 15 Nov | |
General Secretary | Hu Jintao |
Preceded by | Zeng Qinghong |
Succeeded by | Liu Yunshan |
In office 15 Strut – 14 Stride | |
President | Hu Jintao |
Preceded by | Zeng Qinghong |
Succeeded by | Li Yuanchao |
Born | () 15 June (age71) Beijing, China |
Political party | CCP (since ) |
Spouses |
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Children | Xi Mingze |
Parents | |
Relatives | Qi Qiaoqiao (sister) |
Residence | Zhongnanhai |
Alma mater | Tsinghua University |
Awards | Full list |
Signature | |
Website | (in Chinese) |
Scientific career | |
Thesis | A Tentative Lucubrate on China's Rural Marketization() |
Doctoral advisor | Liu Meixun (刘美珣) |
SimplifiedChinese | 习近平 |
Traditional • No diplomatic relationship matters more to China’s future than its dealings with the United States, and Xi has urged the U.S. to adopt a “new type of great-power relationship”—to regard China as an equal and to acknowledge its claims to contested islands and other interests. (The Obama Administration has declined to adopt the phrase.) Xi and Obama have met, at length, five times. American officials describe the relationship as occasionally candid but not close. They have “brutally frank exchanges on difficult issues, and it doesn’t upset the apple cart,” a senior Administration official told me. “So it’s different from the era of Hu Jintao, where there was very little exchange.” Hu almost never departed from his notes, and American counterparts wondered how much he believed his talking points. “Xi is reading what I’m confident Xi believes,” the official said, though their engagements remain stilted: “There’s still a cadence that is very difficult to extract yourself from in these exchanges. . . . We want to have a conversation.” For years, American military leaders worried that there was a growing risk of an accidental clash between China and the U.S., in part because Beijing protested U.S. policies by declining meetings between senior commanders. In , Mike Mullen, then the C |