AP/ March 17, 2013, 8:08 AM

China's new leader rejects "hedonism and extravagance"

BEIJING China's new leaders pledged to run a cleaner, more efficient government and slash spending on official perks Sunday as the ceremonial legislature wrapped up a pivotal session to install a new leadership in a once-a-decade transfer of power.

The transition that began in November under strict orchestration by China's ruling Communist Party has taken place at time of lower estimates of future economic growth and rising public anger over massive corruption, waste, and extravagant spending that are exasperating a yawning wealth gap.

President Xi Jinping told the nearly 3,000 delegates gathered at Beijing's hulking Great Hall of the People that his government would "resolutely reject formalism, bureaucratism, hedonism and extravagance, and resolutely fight against corruption and other misconduct in all manifestations."

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Shortly afterward, freshly appointed Premier Li Keqiang said the central government would slash its payroll and freeze spending on overseas trips, guest houses, office buildings and new vehicles in response to falling revenues.

"The central government will lead by example and all local governments must follow suit," Li said in his first major appearance before domestic and international media.

Li said that the government would have to push hard to meet its economic growth target of 7.5 percent for the year, while funds flowing into central government coffers increased by just 1.6 percent over January and February. Although such low growth is expected to continue, spending on social programs will only increase, forcing the government to cut back in other areas, Li said.

Niu Jun, a scholar at Peking University's School of International Relations, said Xi and Li hit on topics familiar to a Chinese public that has grown weary of promises to fight inefficiency, corruption and waste.

"I don't have terribly high expectations for these new pledges," he said.

However, Niu said Li struck a chord with by placing a new emphasis on handling matters strictly according to procedures rather in the form of some new campaign or crackdown.

"I was especially impressed about Li's commitment to handle matters according to laws and rules. That really shows the government is paying heavy attention to building the legal system," Niu said.

Xi, already the country's overall leader since being named Communist Party general secretary in November, was installed in the largely ceremonial post of president during the 13-day session of the rubberstamp National People's Congress that ended Sunday. Li, the party's No. 2 leader, was named premier on Friday.

On Saturday, legislators endorsed the leadership's slate of veteran technocrats - many with strong international experience - to staff a Cabinet charged with ensuring continued growth through government streamlining, increased consumption and a movement toward higher technology and less labor intensive industries.

They also need to guard against an overseas backlash against a more assertive foreign policy, cyber-hacking and years of scouring the world for resources, and Li sought to send a reassuring message on ties with U.S. - China's most important overseas relationship.

"Like in the past, the new government in China attaches great importance to ties with the U.S.," Li said. China acknowledges differences with Washington, but sees considerable room from growth in investment and trade that reached almost $500 billion last year, he said.

Among Saturday's appointments was Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng, who has a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Paris and has worked in Europe and Africa. And the finance minister was Lou Jiwei, chairman of China's multibillion-dollar sovereign wealth fund and a fixture in international financial circles. Zhou Xiaochuan, another prominent figure, was kept on as central bank governor.

Wang Yi, a career diplomat with experience working on North Korea and other knotty diplomatic issues, was named foreign minister, while head of the manned space program, Gen. Chang Wanquan, was named defense minister.

China's economy is limping out of its deepest slump since the 2008 global crisis, and a dip in February consumer sales and factory output has spurred fears that the rebound might be faltering. Economic growth fell to 7.8 percent last year, China's weakest performance since the 1990s.

Responsibility for the economy will largely fall to Li and vice premier in charge of economic affairs Wang Yang, a reformist ally of now-retired President Hu Jintao.

Also Saturday, in a sign of displeasure with severe pollution, the normally compliant National People's Congress deputies cast an unusually high number of "no" votes for members of its environmental protection committee: 1,969 in favor to 850 opposed, with another 140 abstaining.

Sunday's closing session was also enveloped in smog, with many schools canceling outdoor sports activities.

Before adjourning Sunday, the congress also approved this year's budget, the Cabinet's report on its work of the previous year, and plans the 2013. The newly appointed congress speaker Zhang Dejiang delivered remarks emphasizing the need for stronger legal protections for the country's 1.3 billion people.

"To ensure people's democratic rights, we must strengthen the rule of law and put democracy within institutional and legal frameworks," he said.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
24 Comments Add a Comment
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johnybigballs says:
It must be the Liberal media filling all the slant eyes heads full of non sense. There's nothing wrong with the air. It's just all those pesky business killers . You can keep your garbage products China. America sure does have a lot of stupid people allowing those garbage products to come into there country made at 50 cent labor. I think people in the US are to stupid to read there own Constitution unless it has to do with having guns
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Xthes says:
Really? Such original thinking ... yawn ...
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harold_Llloyd says:
China could solve it's corruption problem simply enough by offering the equivalent of $100 for reporting any official who demanded a bribe.

And maybe we should outsource some govt functions, like the House and the Senate. But make payment contingent on good results, unlike now.
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judymar3 says:
A cleaner government would be to make it illegal to buy body parts of slaughtered animals from Africa.
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tttuffi says:
Sounds like they are tying to rein in, their own brand of republicans!
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Louis_Chez replies:
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What kind of ridiculously stupid comment is that to make?

What is the matter with you?
johnybigballs replies:
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tttuffi you are right. 100% right. The Republicans im sure are over there trying to convince them it's just fog.
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jefforsythe says:
He is just another lying gangster.The new president's biggest challenge will be how to hide the corruption and the million of heinous crimes against humanity that the brutal Chinese Communist Party has committed since 1949.Crimes such as the murder of a hundred million innocent citizens, crimes such as the genocide, which is going on right now, of the tens of millions of innocent Falun Gong practitioners by the use of torture, slavery, organ harvesting and murder. Just recently, a young pregnant Falun Gong was put in a prison cell with four hardened criminals, where she was raped continuously on Party orders. Let us not forget the hundreds of hidden slave camps. The cruel CCP is simply a gangster regime that teaches its people godlessness and brutality and Western companies line up to do business as usual because of insatiable greed. The worst crime of all is the crime against conscience.
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Louis_Chez replies:
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The Falun Gong practitioners? Who the hell cares?
They are not our problem!
johnybigballs replies:
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I care, I dont want those garbage products coming to the US for free. It is illegal what the Republicans and the 1% are doing to the middle class. It sounds like we are close to a rise up. The Rescumbags and the 1% are targets and don't stand a chance against the poor.
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BludApfel says:
...says the newly elected leader who obviously is more than well fed.
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mtracy99 replies:
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We need to institute our own reforms here in America where the top 1% of Americans own 40% of the nation's wealth and where our rich get away with paying only 15% on capital gains. Also, our corporate elite likes to start wars all over the world, but wants America's middle-class to pay for them.
Louis_Chez replies:
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Sorry, MTRACY.

You are completely wrong! Our corporate elites don't make the decision to go to war.

How does the middle class pay for wars and the rich don't?

Isn't that as stupid as trying to say Bush cut taxes for the rich, when in reality he cut taxes for everyone?
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ajmg111 says:
Are you listening President Obama? Your "Elitist" government will consume the country if you let go unchecked.
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Louis_Chez replies:
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Agreed!
mtracy99 replies:
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It's our corporate elite that runs our government. These rich pigs will move Heaven and Earth to make sure that they pay less in taxes than America's middle-class does. Leeches like Donald Trump who inherited their wealth are the worst kind of scum.
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naksuthin says:
Looks like the Chinese are starting to move towards a cleaning up their polluted environment and instituting more social programs for the masses...while cutting down on extravagance by a few wealthy Chinese.
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Krowster says:
However, it will also depend on what's behind door Number 1. If the Price Is Right, I will run the government a differently.
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