Winter Olympics have been a coup for China’s regime

Staging the Beijing 2022 Games has bolstered the ruling Communist Party’s legitimacy

Aside from fake snow and Covid-19, the Beijing Winter Games are controversial for many reasons.

They are a potent political symbol of the Chinese state’s ambitions and authority.

Held just a year after the triumphalist 100-year anniversary of the Communist Party’s founding, General Secretary Xi Jinping is using the Olympics to showcase to the world that China is powerful and on track to fulfil its “Chinese Dream” of national rejuvenation.

How will the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) use the Games domestically to push this narrative and how will it be viewed by the rest of the world? What does the party hope to gain by the Games being perceived as a success?

Some observers see China’s rise as generating a strategic power conflict and threatening the liberal world order. Others see China’s rise as more benign, even appropriate for a country possessing 4,000 years of history and having made astonishing economic progress in the past 50 years.

Diplomatic boycott

These contrasting interpretations have generated much debate internationally before the Olympics. Several Western countries have declared a diplomatic boycott because of concerns over shocking human rights violations of the Uighur minority and deep repression in civil society, particularly in Hong Kong.

China’s reputation deteriorated after the safety of tennis star Peng Shuai, an alleged sexual assault victim, became a matter of international concern.

Domestically, however, the Olympics are portrayed as something that benefits the Chinese people – a way for Chinese athletes to achieve glory and to showcase the CCP’s ability to execute a world-class sporting event.

The underlying narrative glorifies the regime and legitimizes the Party’s institutions and practices.

China’s zero-Covid policy has come under fire. Photo: Courtesy of Xinhua

Chinese media have struck back at the international criticism, saying the United States is being dumb and mean for criticizing China’s highly restrictive zero-Covid policies and the Americans weren’t invited to the Olympics in the first place.

The domestic objective of these aggressive narratives is to reaffirm the primacy of the CCP as the best protector of China and its people against provocative elements in the international community.

At the same time, the Games represent an opportunity for President Xi to reset the global rhetoric on China by welcoming the world to Beijing’s “smart, environmentally friendly” Olympics.

China’s so-called “Wolf-Warrior diplomacy” has hurt more than helped its interests abroad. As a result, Xi has “set the tone right” by being more modest and humble, to promote a more “credible, lovable and respectable image of China.”

For Xi, he needs both the Party’s compliance and acceptance. The Party is at the core of everything he wants to do – primarily, to deliver his “Chinese Dream” to the people.

Chinese Dream

While it has often been compared to the “American Dream,” it is most emphatically not an “American Dream” with Chinese characteristics.

The “American Dream” emphasizes individual freedoms, social mobility and material success brought about by one’s own efforts. In the “Chinese Dream,” national well-being supersedes individual desires and achievements.

As such, the CCP spins a narrative that only the Party can achieve the “Chinese Dream” for the people.

So, when someone or something is perceived as a threat to the Party’s centrality, the regime launches into self-preservation mode. For example, when some in the West raised the prospect Covid-19 may have been engineered in a Chinese lab, the Foreign Ministry struck back hard by endorsing a conspiracy theory the US Army introduced the virus to China.

President Xi Jinping’s reputation has been boosted by the Winter Olympics. Photo: Screenshot VOA

In Xi’s speech on the 100th anniversary of the CCP’s founding last year, Party members were reminded that the CCP leadership, with Comrade Xi, at its core is “the foundation and lifeblood of the Party and the country and the crux upon which the interests and well-being of all Chinese people depend.”

The presentation of the Beijing Winter Olympics to the Chinese people is crucial to this overarching narrative that Xi and the Party are creating. They need the Chinese people to adhere to the “Chinese Dream” as their dream.

This need is evident in the language Xi uses in public statements. He evokes a great deal of imagery to exhort the Chinese people to march together with the Party on the same difficult path toward this shared vision of the future.

As China continues to build its economy and burnish its great power status with high-profile events such as these Winter Olympics, it is also attempting to show the world that its model of governance is supreme.

Giant advertisement

These games are a giant advertisement for the Communist Party, exemplifying the kind of sharp efficiency that high-tech, authoritarian governments can bring to events of this magnitude.

It can also demonstrate how successful the government has been in containing Covid-19, though this has involved blockading people in their own homes and the discriminatory treatment of Africans living in China.

So, when global audiences cheer for their winter heroes, they will also be cheering for the CCP – whether they like that or not.

Yan Bennett is an assistant director for the Paul and Marcia Wythes Center on Contemporary China at Princeton University. John Garrick is a University Fellow in Law at the Charles Darwin University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of China Factor.