Addressing a high-profile national conference on united front
work earlier this week, President and Communist Party General
Secretary Hu Jintao called for an "unprecedented
extensive and tremendously inclusive united front" to facilitate
the nation's modernization drive.
Just in case the political jargon does not ring a bell with you
in terms of what this means and where it stands in modern and
contemporary Chinese politics, the united front, along with armed
struggle and Party building, helped bring the Party to power during
the years of Chinese revolution.
Building such alliances helped the Party organize successful
resistance against the invading Japanese and win a protracted civil
war with overwhelming Kuomintang forces.
It was broad sympathy and endorsement from beyond the Party that
lifted the CPC to its current ruling status. The Party knows that
very well, as one of the four departments of the CPC Central
Committee focuses exclusively on united front work.
Hu's appeal was a sensible one because it is not only in line
with his people-centered approach, but is also an essential
prerequisite to building a harmonious society.
The CPC's legendary rise to power has cultivated generations of
enthusiastic and, in many cases, successful alliance builders.
Late Chairman Mao Zedong, himself a big fan of people power,
once famously stated that, during a revolution, what is most
important is being able to tell your friends from your enemies. A
primary cause of the failures in the early years of Chinese
revolution, he said, was rooted in the failure to unite true
friends and attack true enemies, or in other words, to build a
meaningful united front.
In our time of peace, when revolution is part of a long-gone
past and enemy elements have withered into a negligible existence
in society, the united front is no longer a tool of struggle of any
kind.
But it continues to be a necessary social adhesive. The new
mission of united front work today is to rally as many people and
as much support as possible around the CPC's ambitious
nation-building program.
Since its announced goal of common prosperity is in the
interests of virtually all, the united front can be as broad as
society is. In this sense, it can be as extensive as possible, as
long as it is inclusive.
The importance that Hu attached to inclusiveness is truly
inspiring. An inclusive united front entails respect for divergent
needs and wants, as well as different opinions. It is a very
positive response to the increasingly pluralized and diversified
society.
Mao once urged his colleagues to overcome their fear of
differences within the united front. Friction is a natural part of
a united front. It is not a problem if we keep it from becoming
one, he said.
One reason why Hu and his comrades have the nation behind them
is because they face and deal with life's less rosy aspects. There
will be few real difficulties if a nation is a united front.
(China Daily July 14, 2006)