Politics News
Latest politics news and updates
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China’s 2026 Priorities: From Risk Control to Tech-Led Development, ‘Development’ Tops the Government Report
An analysis of China’s 2026 Government Work Report shows “development” as the most frequently used word and a reordering of priorities toward technology, industrial upgrading and social policies that bolster domestic demand. The shift signals a tactical move from defensive risk-control to proactive growth measures, though structural risks remain.

Beijing’s 2026 Roadmap: Ten National Priorities Signal Tech-Driven, Cautious Growth Push
China’s 2026 government work report lays out ten priority tasks that combine a push for strategic technologies with cautious fiscal management and modest social relief. The plan signals targeted industrial support for sectors such as future energy and quantum technology while prioritising financial prudence and implementation through local governments.

China’s Government Work Report Signals Bigger Fiscal Push, Tech Self-Reliance and a Consumption Drive as 15th Five-Year Plan Begins
China’s 2026 Government Work Report, explained at a State Council briefing, sets a 4.5–5.0% growth target and signals a more active, targeted fiscal and monetary stance to launch the first year of the 15th Five‑Year Plan. The plan prioritises innovation, consumer demand, and concrete social measures while stressing operational feasibility and policy precision.

Beijing Warns Taiwan: 'Independence Is a Dead End' as Mainland Signals Leverage in 15th Five‑Year Plan Era
A senior Chinese NPC delegate warned that Taiwan independence is a ‘‘dead end’’ and urged Taiwanese to distrust external backers, framing unification as inevitable amid Beijing’s growing economic and military strength. He presented the mainland’s upcoming 15th Five‑Year Plan as a major opportunity for Taiwan’s participation, while blaming the DPP and foreign arms sales for raising tensions.

Beijing Pushes Consumption, Legal Certainty and Tech Self‑Reliance as NPC Sets Out '15th Five' Agenda
At the NPC press conference opening the 14th session, Beijing framed the '15th Five' era around boosting consumption, deepening rule‑based openness for foreign investors, and accelerating technological self‑reliance, especially in AI. Lawmaking — including a national development planning law and an ecological environment code — is being used to lock in those strategic priorities and offer regulatory predictability.

Beijing Delegate Tells Taiwan Voters ‘Independence Is a Dead End’ as Beijing Offers Economic Pull, Military Push
An NPC delegate, Zeng Liqun, warned Taiwanese that independence is a dead end and urged engagement with the mainland’s upcoming 15th Five‑Year Plan, while condemning the DPP and external actors for undermining cross‑strait ties. His comments blend economic inducements with security warnings, reflecting Beijing’s simultaneous carrot‑and‑stick approach to Taiwan amid heightened regional tensions.

Frontline Nurse-Turned-NPC Deputy Pushes for Professionalization of PLA Civilian Staff
Gao Rui, a nurse manager at the Northern Theater Command General Hospital and NPC delegate, is advocating for the professional development of the PLA’s civilian workforce. Her frontline proposals—on training, promotion, accreditation and welfare—highlight Beijing’s focus on building human capital to complement broader military modernization efforts.

China’s Two Sessions Signal a “Race to Lead” as Beijing Pushes for a Fast Start
State media’s framing of this year’s Two Sessions as a call to “race to lead” signals Beijing’s emphasis on rapid implementation and visible results at the start of the new term. The approach could accelerate policy delivery and reassure markets, but it also carries risks of short-termism and local fiscal strains.

From Jinggangshan to the NPC: A People's Armed Police Officer Repackages 'Red' Education for a New Generation
Zheng Hao, a People's Armed Police instructor and NPC deputy, has institutionalised a sensory "five-one" induction rooted in Jinggangshan and Nanchang revolutionary sites to instil red tradition in recruits. His proposals to digitise and centralise red-education resources reflect Beijing’s push to bind military professionalisation to Party loyalty and scale patriotic instruction across an internet-savvy generation.

Veteran Legal Scholar Pushes Rule-of-Law Training into China’s Armed Police Ranks
Professor Li Li, a CPPCC member and Armed Police law scholar, has been mobilising legal education and grassroots legal aid inside the People's Armed Police to address gaps on cyber infringement, data breaches and inconsistent local implementation of troops' benefits. Her work aims to institutionalise legal training and harmonise policy execution to strengthen both troop welfare and disciplined, rule-based military governance.

China’s Provinces Reveal Scale of New Childcare Subsidies as Beijing Eyes Wider Rollout
Fourteen Chinese provinces reported roughly ¥45.9 billion in 2025 allocations for a new childcare subsidy that pays ¥3,600 per child annually for children under three. Beijing says about ¥100 billion will be spent nationally in 2025 and that more than 30 million infants have received payments; however, regional disparities and implementation challenges leave the policy’s demographic impact uncertain.

When New Recruits Meet Old Hands: A Moment That Sells Continuity in China’s Military
A Xinhua photo of a new recruit meeting a veteran has been framed as a symbol of continuity in the People’s Liberation Army, conveying both political messaging and practical concerns about recruitment, professionalization and veteran reintegration. The image underscores Beijing’s effort to present the military as modern yet rooted in tradition, even as the PLA confronts evolving personnel and welfare challenges.