Historically Thinking
Historically Thinking
The Party's Interests Come First
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The Party's Interests Come First

Joseph Torigian on the Life of Xi Zhongxun, Father of Xi Jinping

Introduction

According to Chinese Communist official Xi Zhongxun, his first revolutionary act was an attempt to poison one of his school’s administrators when he was 14. He was faithful to the revolution, and the Chinese Communist Party, until his death at age 88 in 2002. In between those ages was a remarkable life. He fought Nationalists and Japanese. He was a right-hand man to both Zhou Enlai in the 1950s, and Hu Yaobang in the 1980s. As the Party administrator responsible for dealing with religious groups, he negotiated with the Dalai Lama–and would show off the wristwatch that the Dalai Lama gave him.

But Xi also spent sixteen years in house arrest, internal exile, under suspicion, or at least out of power, from 1962 to 1978. “In the early 1990s, Xi even boasted to a Western historian that although Deng Xiaoping had suffered at the hands of the party on three occasions, he had been persecuted five times.” All this would make Xi Zhongxun fascinating simply as a psychological study of a Communist functionary who, despite everything, remained devoted to the system that oppressed him. But Xi Zhongxun was also the father of Xi Jinping, now effectively the dictator of China. If we are to understand the younger Xi, argues my guest Joseph Torigian, then we must understand his father.

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About the Guest

Joseph Torigian is an associate professor in the School of International Service at American University in Washington, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, and a center associate of the Lieberthal-Rogel Center for Chinese Studies at the University of Michigan. He was previously on the podcast to discuss his book Prestige, Manipulation, and Coercion: Elite Power Struggles in the Soviet Union and China after Stalin and Mao, a conversation that was published on May 23, 2022. His latest book is The Party’s Interests Come First: The Life of Xi Zhongxun, Father of Xi Jinping was released with Stanford University Press in June 2025. It was a Financial Times Book of the Summer and an Economist Best Book of the Year So far.


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Reflection Questions

  1. What does Xi Zhongxun’s repeated persecution—and continued loyalty—reveal about how the Chinese Communist Party understands faithfulness and dissent?

  2. How does Torigian’s portrait challenge common assumptions that suffering under authoritarianism naturally produces reformist or liberal instincts?

  3. What are the limits of using a parent’s life to explain a son’s behavior?


If understanding the political inheritance of power in China matters to you, share this conversation with someone who follows contemporary politics or modern history.

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Tags: Xi Zhongxun, Xi Jinping, Chinese Communist Party, Modern Chinese history, Chinese political leadership, Maoist China, CCP political culture, Authoritarianism in China, Chinese elite politics

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