Will Xi Jinping cut seats at Politburo top table from seven to five?
President may be able to consolidate grip if number of seats in Politburo Standing Committee is trimmed to five at next year’s five-yearly leadership shuffle
A question at a press conference three months before the Communist Party’s 18th national congress in 2012 caught a spokesman for the party’s Organisation Department off guard.
“How many people are there in the next Politburo Standing Committee?” an American journalist asked.
The spokesman for the department, which oversees the party’s apparatchiks, could only reply: “I don’t know.”
In fact, before the members of the new Politburo Standing Committee, the party’s top decision-making body, walked onto the stage at the conclusion of the five-yearly party meeting to pose for pictures, the world was as clueless about their identity as it was about their number.
Analysts said the five-yearly reshuffle at the top of the party looming late next year, centred around its 19th national congress, would present a good opportunity for party general secretary Xi Jinping to consolidate his power by reducing the Politburo Standing Committee membership from seven to five.