China's pick as the 11th Panchen Lama is at least a year away from receiving the honorific title of CPPCC deputy chairman, with the advisory group set to select another candidate for the top job today.
But he still has the central government's blessing and support as China's face of Tibetan Buddhism. His portrait is rarely hung in Tibetan homes, however, unlike the show of respect paid to his predecessor and the 14th Dalai Lama.
After years of careful training and grooming, the Panchen Lama was appointed a delegate to the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference this year.
It had been speculated that, at the age of 20, the CPPCC's youngest delegate could become one of the advisory group's more than 20 vice-chairmen, with state leadership rank, to replace the late Ngapoi Ngawang Jigme. But according to Liu Bainian , vice-chairman of the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association and a CPPCC delegate, former Macau chief executive Edmund Ho Hau-wah is the only candidate on the list.
The delegates will hold a ceremonial election for a new vice-chairman today, as the annual CPPCC plenum draws to a close.
The Panchen Lama has been in demand this year, with journalists keen to glimpse the saffron-robed Living Buddha, who has been attending the plenum for years as a guest.