Anti-corruption Xi called for a crack down on corruption immediately after he ascended to power, starting an
anti-corruption campaign. In his inaugural speech as general secretary, Xi mentioned that fighting corruption was one of the toughest challenges for the party. A few months into his term, Xi outlined the
Eight-point Regulation, listing rules intended to curb corruption and waste during official party business; it aimed at stricter discipline on the conduct of officials. Xi vowed to root out "tigers and flies", that is, high-ranking officials and ordinary party functionaries. He also launched the
Party's Mass Line Education and Practice Activities, aiming CCP cadres to use
mass line and instill Party discipline. The campaign lasted from 2013 to 2014. Xi's anti-corruption campaign has led to the downfall of prominent incumbent and retired CCP officials, including members of the PSC. Xi initiated cases against former CMC vice chairmen
Xu Caihou and
Guo Boxiong, former PSC member and security chief
Zhou Yongkang and former CCP General Office director
Ling Jihua. Xi has overseen significant reforms of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), CCP's highest
internal control institution. He and CCDI Secretary
Wang Qishan further institutionalized CCDI's independence from the day-to-day operations of the CCP, improving its ability to function as a
bona fide control body. According to
The Wall Street Journal, anti-corruption punishment to officials at or above the vice ministerial level need approval from Xi. In 2017, the campaign led to the downfall of Chongqing Party Secretary and Politburo member
Sun Zhengcai. In March 2018, the
National Supervisory Commission was established as the highest state supervisory and anti-corruption authority in an effort to aid the CCDI. In January 2018, Xi launched a three-year
Special Campaign to Crack Down on Organized Crime and Eliminate Evil that lasted until 2020. After the special campaign exposed problems in the legal system, the CCP announced a campaign to
educate and rectify the political and legal teams in July 2020. Especially since 2023, Xi has also overseen significant anti-corruption efforts in the military, with some targets involving those that rose to prominence under his leadership. Those targeted included former defense ministers
Li Shangfu and
Wei Fenghe, CMC vice chairmen
He Weidong and
Zhang Youxia, and CMC member
Miao Hua. In addition, former Xinjiang Party Secretary and Politburo member
Ma Xingrui was put under investigation in 2026.
Bloomberg News estimated that as October 2025, at least 14 generals out of 79 appointed under Xi's leadership have been ousted. Xi has introduced stringent restrictions on
naked officials, CCP officials with spouses or children residing abroad, eventually culminating in a 2025 campaign to require cadres of vice-ministerial rank or above being required to either repatriate family members or resign from office.
Political developments Declaring that the "government, the military, society and schools, north, south, east and west –
the party leads them all", Xi has taken measures to significantly increase the role of the CCP in public life. In January 2013, the Politburo made a decision to tighten standards for CCP membership. Consequently, the annual increase in the total numbers of new party members dropped from 2.5 percent in 2012 to 1.1 percent in 2014, 0.7 percent in 2016, and 0.1 percent in 2017, before rising to 1.2 percent in 2018. He oversaw a revival of party life meetings, where party members engage in criticism and self-criticism. In November 2013, at the conclusion of the
third plenum of the 18th Central Committee, the Communist Party adopted the
Decision on Several Major Issues Concerning Comprehensively Deepening Reform, a far-reaching reform agenda that alluded to changes in both economic and social policy.. The
Central Leading Group for Comprehensively Deepening Reforms—another
ad hoc policy coordination body led by Xi upgraded to a commission in 2018—was also formed to oversee the implementation of the reform agenda. Termed "comprehensive deepening reforms", they were said to be the most significant since Deng Xiaoping's 1992 Southern Tour. The plenum also announced economic reforms and resolved to abolish the
laogai system of "
re-education through labour", which was largely seen as a blot on China's human rights record. The system has faced significant criticism for years from domestic critics and foreign observers. Beginning in 2013, the CCP under Xi has created a series of Central Leading Groups: supra-ministerial steering committees, designed to bypass existing institutions when making decisions, and ostensibly make policy-making a more efficient process. Xi was also believed to have diluted the authority of premier Li Keqiang, taking authority over the economy which has generally been considered to be the domain of the premier. February 2014 oversaw the creation of the
Central Leading Group for Cybersecurity and Informatization with Xi as its leader. The State Internet Information Office (SIIO), previously under the
State Council Information Office (SCIO), was transferred to the central leading group and renamed in English into the Cyberspace Administration of China. As part of managing the financial system, the
Financial Stability and Development Committee, a State Council body, was established in 2017. Chaired by vice premier
Liu He during its existence, the committee was disestablished by the newly established Central Financial Commission during the 2023 Party and state reforms. Xi has increased the role of the
Central Financial and Economic Affairs Commission at the expense of the
State Council. Observers have said that Xi has seriously diluted the influence of the once-dominant
Tuanpai, also called the Youth League Faction, which were CCP officials who rose through the Communist Youth League (CYLC). He criticized the cadres of the CYLC, saying that "[these cadres] can't talk about science, literature and art, work or life [with young people]. All they can do is just repeat the same old bureaucratic, stereotypical talk." In 2015, Xi announced the
Four Comprehensives, namely comprehensively build a
moderately prosperous society, deepening reform, governing the nation according to
law, and strictly governing the Party; in 2021, at the 100th anniversary of the CCP, Xi declared that China achieved its goal of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects. In 2015, Xi oversaw the revamping of the National Honor System. Xi has had a
cult of personality constructed around himself since entering office with books, cartoons, pop songs and dance routines honouring his rule. In 2016, Xi was proclaimed the CCP's fourth
leadership core, following
Mao Zedong,
Deng Xiaoping, and
Jiang Zemin. Following Xi's ascension to the leadership core of the CCP, he had been referred to as
Xi Dada (, Uncle or Papa Xi), though this stopped in April 2016. The village of Liangjiahe, where Xi was sent to work, is decorated with propaganda and murals extolling the formative years of his life. The CCP's Politburo named Xi Jinping
lingxiu (), a reverent term for "leader" and a title previously only given to Mao Zedong and his immediate successor
Hua Guofeng. He is also sometimes called the "pilot at the helm" (). In March 2018, the
first session of the
13th National People's Congress passed
constitutional amendments including removal of term limits for the president and vice president, the creation of a National Supervisory Commission, as well as enhancing the central role of the CCP. Xi was reappointed as president, now without term limits, while Li Keqiang was reappointed premier. According to the
Financial Times, Xi expressed his views of constitutional amendment at meetings with Chinese officials and foreign dignitaries. Xi explained the decision in terms of needing to align two more powerful posts—general secretary of the CCP and chairman of the CMC—which have no term limits. However, Xi did not say whether he intended to be party general secretary, CMC chairman and state president, for three or more terms. The first session of the 13th NPC also adopted the
deepening the reform of the Party and state institutions. In that year, several
central leading groups including
reform, cyberspace affairs, finance and economics, and
foreign affairs were upgraded to commissions. The powers of the Central Publicity Department was strengthened, which now oversaw the newly established
China Media Group (CMG). In 2020, all elections at all levels of the
people's congress system and NPC were mandated to adhere to the leadership of the CCP. meeting the press, October 2022In its sixth plenary session in November 2021, CCP adopted the
Resolution on the Major Achievements and Historical Experience of the Party over the Past Century, which evaluated the party's historical legacy from its
foundation in 1921 until its
100th anniversary in 2021. This was the third of historical resolution after ones adopted by Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. In comparison with the other historical resolutions, Xi's one did not herald a major change in how the CCP evaluated its history. To accompany the historical resolution, the CCP promoted the terms
Two Establishments and
Two Upholds, calling the CCP to unite around and protect Xi's core status within the party. The
20th Party National Congress, held between 16 and 22 October 2022, has overseen amendments in the
CCP constitution, with the overall result of the Congress further strengthening Xi's power. Xi was subsequently re-elected as general secretary of the CCP and chairman of the CMC for a third term during the
first plenary session of the
20th Central Committee held on 23 October 2022, held immediately after the Party Congress. Xi's re-election made him the first party leader since Mao Zedong to be chosen for a third term. The new Politburo Standing Committee elected by the Central Committee was filled almost completely with people close to Xi, with four out of the seven members of the previous PSC stepping down. Xi was unanimously re-elected as the president and chairman of the PRC Central Military Commission on 10 March 2023 during the
first session of the
14th National People's Congress. At the same time, Xi ally
Li Qiang succeeded Li Keqiang as the Premier. 2023 has seen further reforms to the CCP and state bureaucracy called the
plan on reforming Party and state institutions, which included the strengthening of Party control over the financial and technology domains. This included the creation of two CCP bodies for overseeing finance; the
Central Financial Commission (CFC), as well as the revival of the
Central Financial Work Commission (CFWC) that was previously dissolved in 2002. Several regulatory responsibilities were also transferred from the
People's Bank of China (PBC) to another regulatory body, while the PBC reopened offices around the country that were closed in a previous reorganization.
Ideology Xi and CCP ideologues coined the phrase "Chinese Dream" to describe his overarching plans for China as its leader. Xi first used the phrase during a high-profile visit to the
National Museum of China on 29 November 2012, where he and his Politburo Standing Committee colleagues were attending a "national revival" exhibition. Since then, the phrase has become the signature political slogan of the Xi era. The origin of the term "Chinese Dream" is unclear. While the phrase has been used before by journalists and scholars, some publications have posited the term likely drew its inspiration from the concept of the
American Dream.
The Economist noted the abstract and seemingly accessible nature of the concept with no specific overarching policy stipulations may be a deliberate departure from the jargon-heavy ideologies of his predecessors. Xi has linked the "Chinese Dream" with the phrase "
great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation". Under Xi, China has emphasized the
Core Socialist Values, which was first articulated during the 18th National Congress in 2012. Xi's tenure has been marked with a tightening of ideology. The
Document Number Nine leaked in 2013 warned of seven dangerous Western values, namely
Western constitutional democracy,
universal values,
civil society,
neoliberalism,
the West's idea of journalism,
historical nihilism and the questioning of
reform and opening up and the socialist nature of
socialism with Chinese characteristics. The document quickly set the ideological tone of the Xi administration. In August 2013, Xi gave what became known as the "
August 19 speech" at the
National Conference on Publicity and Ideological Work, where he emphasized ideological work, the guiding role of
Marxism, and dangers posed by ideological infiltration. "Xi Jinping Thought on socialism with Chinese characteristics for a new era" was formally launched at the
19th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party having gradually been developed since 2012, when Xi became general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party. In his political discourse, Xi incorporates historical examples and themes. He describes history as "the best teacher" and "the best textbook". He introduced the concept in 2014, which he defined as taking "the security of the people as compass, political security as its roots, economic security as its pillar, military security and cultural security as its protections, and that relies on the promotion of international security." A new
National Security Commission was formed in 2014 with Xi at its helm, centralizing national security decision-making. Since its creation by Xi, the National Security Commission has established local security committees, focusing on dissent. In 2015, 15 April was declared as
National Security Education Day. Believing it to be an important foundation of national security, Xi's administration has prioritized efforts to establish
food security by pushing for as much as self-sufficiency in food as possible, while launching the
Clean Plate campaign in 2013 and 2020 to combat food waste. He has additionally given priority to energy security; China is the world's largest energy consumer, having consumed more energy than the United States, the European Union and Japan combined in 2024. China has made heavy investments in its energy grid and designed policies to lessen dependence on foreign energy imports by investing in renewable energy as well as
coal. Xi has championed the
Fengqiao experience, calling on officials to contain and resolve conflicts at the grassroots level without needing to involve higher legal bodies. In the name of national security, Xi's government has passed numerous laws including the
Counterespionage Law in 2014, the
National Security Law and the
Counterterrorism Law in 2015, the
Cybersecurity Law and the
Law on Administration of Foreign NGOs' Activities within China in 2016, the
National Intelligence Law in 2017, and the
Data Security Law in 2021. Under Xi,
China's mass surveillance network has dramatically grown, with comprehensive profiles being built for each citizen.
Grid-style social management, which involves subdividing China's counties into smaller zones, and assigning each zone to a person that reports all activity to the local government on a regular basis, has risen in prominence under Xi. Public security spending has increased significantly under Xi, reaching $210 billion in 2020, more than double from the decade prior; this was accompanied by a significant decrease in crime. Xi's leadership has also seen a more prominent role taken by the
Ministry of State Security, which expanded its public profile.
Legal system In January 2014, Xi told a political legal work conference to "Stop worrying about the harm and blowback that the current rectification of mistakes may bring us. We know about the unjust, false, and wrong cases. Let’s worry more about the harm and impact these cases have exacted on the people and on the credibility of our judiciary work. The rectification of mistakes—it’s better late than never". The party under Xi announced a raft of
legal reforms at the fourth plenary session of the 18th Central Committee held in the fall 2014, and he called for "
Chinese socialistic rule of law" immediately afterwards. The party aimed to reform the legal system, which had been perceived as ineffective at delivering justice and affected by corruption, local government interference and lack of constitutional oversight. The plenum, while emphasizing the absolute leadership of the party, also called for a greater role of the constitution in the affairs of state and a strengthening of the role of the National People's Congress Standing Committee in interpreting the constitution. It also called for more transparency in legal proceedings, more involvement of ordinary citizens in the legislative process, and an overall "professionalization" of the legal workforce. The party also planned to institute cross-jurisdictional circuit legal tribunals as well as giving provinces consolidated administrative oversight over lower level legal resources, which is intended to reduce local government involvement in legal proceedings. Xi's reforms have attempted to see that CCP officials operate within the law without challenging party leadership. There have been several reforms to the court system under Xi, including transferring the authority over local court finance and personnel from local governments to the provincial-level, establishing a personnel quota system, emphasizing "lifetime accountability" for judges for their judicial decisions, and specification of case transferring procedures between various courts. The practice of party decisions being implemented with or without legislative approval was replaced with the requirement that they have legal authorization. In 2014, China started efforts to pass a unified
Civil Code, which was eventually adopted in 2020. An Anti-Domestic Violence Law was passed in 2015. In the same year, the death penalty was removed for nine more crimes. Efforts were expanded to increase the educational credentials of the judges. A two-year pilot reform to select juries randomly rather than having them chosen through recommendations by local authorities, while efforts were made to increase the indepenendce of judiciary from the local political-legal committees. In 2015, Xi's administration oversaw the establishment of two circuit courts under the Supreme People's Court, followed by four other circuit courts being established in 2016.
Hangzhou Internet Court was established as a court of special jurisdiction in 2017, followed by the establishment of Beijing Internet Court and Guangzhou Internet Court.
Shanghai Financial Court was established in 2018 as a specialized financial court. Under Xi, an increasing share of laws passed by the NPC explicitly affirmed the leadership of the CCP, with the share increasing from 4% in 2018 to nearly 70% in 2024. In 2024, the CCP's role was strengthened further with the
Organic Law of the State Council amended to add a clause about following CCP ideology and policies. == Foreign relations ==