In late April 1989, the official press reported that Li and Beijing mayor
Chen Xitong would be willing to consider disclosing their wealth, apparently in response to student claims of corruption by Government officials. On May 20, 1989, the
New China News Agency released an English-language transcript of remarks from Prime Minister
Li Peng cited a briefing from Li Ximing in which Li described the situation in Beijing as already "anarchic" and getting worse, with increasing violations of law and order. The briefing stated that the situation had begun to "cool down" before the start of May, in response to "great efforts", but that the turmoil had since revived. A speech written by Li in May 1989 criticizing the student protests and implicitly criticizing
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Zhao Ziyang (a reformer who sympathized with the demonstrators and was ultimately purged from power) was passed on to mid-level party officials with instructions that it be studied and then passed down to local units.
The New York Times reported that some of these officials balked at passing the speech to lower levels or did not fully comply with the terms of the request. Li, along with Chen Xitong, was described as part of a group of conservatives who advocated for a military response to the
student protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989, though Li himself did not play a public role in the official crackdown. As reported in the
Tiananmen Papers, published in 2001, Li and Chen foreclosed the option of negotiating with the students by describing the protests as an "anti-party and anti-Socialist political struggle". In Beijing, the resulting military actions on the night of June 3–4, 1989 left many civilians dead or injured, with reported tolls ranged from 200 to 300 (PRC government figures) and to 2,000–3,000 (Chinese student associations and
Chinese Red Cross). ==After Tiananmen Square==