This article is about the group of leadership members of the Chinese Communist Party during the 20th century. For the Taoist deities, seeEight Immortals.
TheEight Great Eminent Officials (Chinese:八大元老;pinyin:Bā dà yuánlǎo), abbreviated as theEight Elders (Chinese:八老;pinyin:Bā lǎo), were a group of elderly members of theChinese Communist Party (CCP) who held substantial power in the last two decades of the 20th century. In the English-speaking world, these men are often calledThe Eight Immortals as anallusion to the Taoist deities commonly known as theEight Immortals.[1]
TheCentral Advisory Commission was the institutional power base of the Eight Elders.[2]: 277 Deng Xiaoping, who emerged as China's top leader in December 1978, as a result of the3rd Plenary Session of the 11th Central Committee, was the most powerful of the group, but his power was never absolute, and he had to consult and make compromises with the other seven Elders, of whom the most prominent wereChen Yun andLi Xiannian (considered the second and third in power, respectively, and both associated with the leftist hard-liners and opposition toreform and market-oriented economy).[3] Deng's allies among the Elders includedYang Shangkun andPeng Zhen.
By the late 1980s, all Elders, including Deng himself, were united in opposition to further political reforms, while holding different views on economic and foreign affairs.
According to reformist General SecretaryZhao Ziyang, of all the Elders, Li Xiannian was the most prominent, most active and most successful in opposing and blocking changes and reforms in both political and economic issues.[4] Important decisions were often made in Deng's home. The Eight Elders were able to remove three Party leaders.Hua Guofeng was gradually removed from Premier and Party chairman between 1980 and 1981;Hu Yaobang was removed in 1987; and,Zhao Ziyang was removed in 1989.[5] Deng, the core of the eight Elders, retired after the 5th Plenary Session of the 13th Central Committee (November 1989), when he resigned from his last official title (Chairman of theCentral Military Commission), and the rest of the Elders officially retired after the 14th Party Congress in October 1992 when the Central Advisory Commission was abolished. They still held decisive influence behind the scenes until Deng's death in February 1997.[6]
Descendants of the eight Elders who have benefited significantly from nepotism and cronyism constitute a group now known as "thePrincelings" or the "Crown Prince Party". Its members, rising through party ranks, can easily overrule any opposition in their jurisdictions, even if they are assigned to a local administrative position. They are often seen to outrank other party officials and possess greater prestige due to their lineage.[5]Bloomberg has reported on the extensive wealth accumulated by these descendants via their roles in various public and private companies.[12]
^Hirata, Koji (2024).Making Mao's Steelworks: Industrial Manchuria and the Transnational Origins of Chinese Socialism. Cambridge Studies in the History of the People's Republic of China series. New York, NY:Cambridge University Press.ISBN978-1-009-38227-4.
^MacFarquhar, Roderick. "Foreword" in Zhao Ziyang (2009). Prisoner of the State: The Secret Journal of Zhao Ziyang. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster.ISBN1-4391-4938-0
^abXiang, Lanxin (April 20, 2012). "Bo Xilai probe shows up China's outdated system of government".South China Morning Post
^abcdefghi"Mapping China's Red Nobility".Bloomberg.com. Graphics: Chloe Whiteaker, Fan Wenxin, Michael Wei, Danny Dougherty and Phil Kuntz. Reporting: Michael Forsythe, Shai Oster, Dune Lawrence, Natasha Khan and Henry Sanderson. RetrievedSeptember 18, 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)