<p>China's Xi Jinping became the country's top leader a decade ago when he was named general secretary of the Communist Party and chairman of the Central Military Commission at the party's 18th congress. The following March he became president.</p>.<p>At the 20th Party Congress, set to begin on October 16, Xi is widely expected to secure a third leadership term, cementing his stature as the country's most powerful ruler since Mao Zedong, the founder of the People's Republic of China.</p>.<p>Xi accumulated power both through specific one-time moves and gradually over time. In doing so he moved China from a tradition of collective leadership, with the general secretary considered first among equals on the politburo standing committee, to what is now widely seen as supreme leadership.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/xi-briefs-senior-communist-party-leaders-ahead-of-its-key-congress-to-endorse-record-3rd-term-for-him-1152073.html" target="_blank">Xi briefs senior Communist Party leaders ahead of its key Congress to endorse record 3rd term for him</a></strong></p>.<p>Following are key ways that Xi strengthened his grip, according to analysts and experts:</p>.<p>- He circumvented economic policy-making responsibilities typically held by the premier by chairing various "small leading groups", including a new group formed in 2012 after he came to power for "reform and opening up", as well as an existing group on finance.</p>.<p>- He undertook a sweeping campaign to purge officials deemed disloyal, corrupt or ineffective, and built his power base by filling those vacant posts with allies. So far, 4.7 million officials have been investigated.</p>.<p>- Xi put trusted allies in charge of party human resources management who control key personnel appointments. His first Organisation Department chief was Zhao Leji, whose father had worked under Xi's father; he was followed in 2017 by Chen Xi, a former Xi schoolmate from Tsinghua University.</p>.<p>- He tightened control of the military by initiating sweeping reforms and retrenchment from 2015.</p>.<p>- He controlled the domestic security apparatus with an ongoing "cleansing" campaign that has brought down many police chiefs and judges.</p>.<p>- From 2015, he ordered the parliament and other bodies including the cabinet and supreme court to brief him on their annual work reports</p>.<p>- Xi told state media in 2016 to toe the party line, that their "surname is the party". Since then, media freedoms steadily decreased, while Xi-related propaganda steadily increased.</p>.<p>- He formally established himself as the "core" of the party - party-speak for paramount leader, in 2016.</p>.<p>- Xi amended the party constitution in 2017 to include Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics. Having an eponymous ideology put him on par only with Mao and Deng Xiaoping.</p>.<p>- He made explicit the supreme role of the party by proclaiming in 2017: "Party, government, military, people, education; east, south, west, north, central: the party leads everything."</p>.<p>- He amended the country's constitution in 2018 to abolish term limits for the presidency, removing a obstacle for him to rule for life.</p>.<p>- The party pledged to uphold the "Two Establishes", party-speak for loyalty to him, in a historical resolution passed in 2021.</p>
<p>China's Xi Jinping became the country's top leader a decade ago when he was named general secretary of the Communist Party and chairman of the Central Military Commission at the party's 18th congress. The following March he became president.</p>.<p>At the 20th Party Congress, set to begin on October 16, Xi is widely expected to secure a third leadership term, cementing his stature as the country's most powerful ruler since Mao Zedong, the founder of the People's Republic of China.</p>.<p>Xi accumulated power both through specific one-time moves and gradually over time. In doing so he moved China from a tradition of collective leadership, with the general secretary considered first among equals on the politburo standing committee, to what is now widely seen as supreme leadership.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/xi-briefs-senior-communist-party-leaders-ahead-of-its-key-congress-to-endorse-record-3rd-term-for-him-1152073.html" target="_blank">Xi briefs senior Communist Party leaders ahead of its key Congress to endorse record 3rd term for him</a></strong></p>.<p>Following are key ways that Xi strengthened his grip, according to analysts and experts:</p>.<p>- He circumvented economic policy-making responsibilities typically held by the premier by chairing various "small leading groups", including a new group formed in 2012 after he came to power for "reform and opening up", as well as an existing group on finance.</p>.<p>- He undertook a sweeping campaign to purge officials deemed disloyal, corrupt or ineffective, and built his power base by filling those vacant posts with allies. So far, 4.7 million officials have been investigated.</p>.<p>- Xi put trusted allies in charge of party human resources management who control key personnel appointments. His first Organisation Department chief was Zhao Leji, whose father had worked under Xi's father; he was followed in 2017 by Chen Xi, a former Xi schoolmate from Tsinghua University.</p>.<p>- He tightened control of the military by initiating sweeping reforms and retrenchment from 2015.</p>.<p>- He controlled the domestic security apparatus with an ongoing "cleansing" campaign that has brought down many police chiefs and judges.</p>.<p>- From 2015, he ordered the parliament and other bodies including the cabinet and supreme court to brief him on their annual work reports</p>.<p>- Xi told state media in 2016 to toe the party line, that their "surname is the party". Since then, media freedoms steadily decreased, while Xi-related propaganda steadily increased.</p>.<p>- He formally established himself as the "core" of the party - party-speak for paramount leader, in 2016.</p>.<p>- Xi amended the party constitution in 2017 to include Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics. Having an eponymous ideology put him on par only with Mao and Deng Xiaoping.</p>.<p>- He made explicit the supreme role of the party by proclaiming in 2017: "Party, government, military, people, education; east, south, west, north, central: the party leads everything."</p>.<p>- He amended the country's constitution in 2018 to abolish term limits for the presidency, removing a obstacle for him to rule for life.</p>.<p>- The party pledged to uphold the "Two Establishes", party-speak for loyalty to him, in a historical resolution passed in 2021.</p>