Li Zhaozheng: Difference between revisions
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|native_name_lang = | |native_name_lang = | ||
|honorific-suffix = | |honorific-suffix = | ||
|image = | |image =Kakuei Tanaka 19720707.jpg | ||
|imagesize = 250px | |imagesize = 250px | ||
|smallimage = <!--If this is specified, "image" should not be.--> | |smallimage = <!--If this is specified, "image" should not be.--> | ||
|caption = Li Zhaozheng in 1965 | |caption = Li Zhaozheng in 1965 | ||
|office = [[ | |office = [[State Chairman of Xiaodong|4<sup>th</sup> State Chairman]] of [[Xiaodong]] | ||
|term_start = | |term_start = 7<sup>th</sup> September 1961 | ||
|term_end = 31<sup>st</sup> | |term_end = 31<sup>st</sup> March 1970 | ||
|deputy = | |deputy = | ||
| | |premier = [[Chen Xuechang]]<br>[[Lu Fangliang]] | ||
|predecessor = [[ | |predecessor = [[Ma Renzhong]] | ||
|successor = [[ | |successor = [[Sun Yuting]] | ||
| | |office2 = [[Vice-Premier of Xiaodong]] | ||
| | |term_start2 = 20<sup>nd</sup> October 1952 | ||
| | |term_end2 = 7<sup>th</sup> September 1961 | ||
| | |premier2 = [[Chen Xuechang]] | ||
| | |predecessor2 = [[Tao Guangmei]] | ||
| | |successor2 = [[Li Shengjun]] | ||
|birth_date = {{Birth date| | |office3 = Member of the [[State Presidium of Xiaodong]] | ||
|birth_place = [[File: | |term_start3 = 20<sup>nd</sup> October 1952 | ||
|death_date = {{Death date and age| | |term_end3 = 21<sup>st</sup> March 1970 | ||
|death_place = [[File:Flag of | |birth_date = {{Birth date|1900|12|08}} | ||
|birth_place = [[File:Imperial flag of Xiaodong.png|22x20px]] Kuoqing, Luoyuan Province, [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Empire|Xiaodong]] | |||
|death_date = {{Death date and age|1978|06|21|1900|12|08}} | |||
|death_place = [[File:Flag of the Brabantine Revolution.svg|22x20px]] Verlois, [[Gaullica]] | |||
|restingplace = | |restingplace = | ||
|restingplacecoordinates = | |restingplacecoordinates = | ||
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|citizenship = | |citizenship = | ||
|nationality = | |nationality = | ||
|party = [[ | |party = [[Xiaodong Regeneration Society]] | ||
|otherparty = <!--For additional political affiliations--> | |otherparty = <!--For additional political affiliations--> | ||
|spouse = Li Ningmei <small>( | |spouse = Li Ningmei <small>(1915-1936)</small><br>[[Lu Fangliang]] <small>(1941-1978)</small> | ||
|partner = <!--For those with a domestic partner and not married--> | |partner = <!--For those with a domestic partner and not married--> | ||
|relations = | |relations = | ||
|children = Li Rishi<br>Lu Guojiao<br>[[Lu Yanling]] | |children = Li Rishi<br>Lu Guojiao<br>[[Lu Yanling]] | ||
|residence = | |residence = | ||
|alma_mater = | |alma_mater = | ||
|occupation = | |occupation = | ||
|profession = | |profession = | ||
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|committees = | |committees = | ||
|portfolio = | |portfolio = | ||
|religion = | |religion = | ||
|signature = | |signature = | ||
|signature_alt = | |signature_alt = | ||
|website = | |website = | ||
|footnotes | | footnotes = {{Collapsible list | ||
| | | titlestyle = background:#EEDD82;text-align:center; | ||
| | | title = Other offices held | ||
| | | bullets = on | ||
| | | 1940-1947: Governor of Luoyuan | ||
| 1940-1947: Governing Mayor of Baiqiao | |||
| 1947-1952: Minister of Industry and Public Enterprises | |||
| 1947-1961: Member of the Legislative Council | |||
| 1952-1961: Secretary-General of the Xiaodong Regeneration Society | |||
| 1961-1970: Chairman of the Xiaodong Regeneration Society | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Li Zhaozheng''' (''{{wp|Mandarin Chinese|Xiaodongese}}'': '''里找正'''; ''Lǐ Zhǎozhèng''; 8<sup>th</sup> December | | branch = [[File:Imperial flag of Xiaodong.png|22x20px]] [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Army]] <small>(1918-1920)</small> | ||
| allegiance = [[File:Imperial flag of Xiaodong.png|22x20px]] [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Empire]] <small>(1918-1920)</small> | |||
| rank = {{wp|First lieutenant}} | |||
| battles = [[Senrian-Xiaodongese War]] | |||
}} | |||
'''Li Zhaozheng''' (''{{wp|Mandarin Chinese|Xiaodongese}}'': '''里找正'''; ''Lǐ Zhǎozhèng''; 8<sup>th</sup> December 1900-21<sup>st</sup> June 1978, aged 77) was a [[Xiaodong|Xiaodongese]] politician who served as the [[State Chairman of Xiaodong]] and Chairman of the [[Xiaodong Regeneration Society]] from September 1961 following the death of [[Ma Renzhong]] to March 1970 when he was ousted in the [[1970 Xiaodongese coup d'état]]. He previously served as vice-premier from 1952 to 1961, secretary-general of the Xiaodong Regeneration Society from 1952 to 1961 to 1952, Minister of Industry and Public Enterprises from 1947 to 1952 and Governing Mayor of Baiqiao and Governor of the Luoyuan Province from 1940 to 1947. | |||
Born in a wealthy landowners family, Li | Born in a wealthy landowners family, Li enlisted in the army in 1918 but moved shortly afterwards to work in the Finance Ministry. During the [[Great War (Kylaris)|Great War]] Li worked for the ministry of munitions initially as a low level bureaucrat before rising through the ministry due to his ability to handle the complex food distribution system in Xiaodong during the war. Li was during his time in the Ministry accused of using criminal connections and slave labour to generate enough rice to meet military quota's. In 1934 when [[Lu Keqian]] was appointed Munitions Minister Li became one of his closest associates. | ||
Li was captured by [[Senria|Senrian]] forces in 1935 following the fall of Baiqiao and briefly detained in a Senrian prison camp in the city before being let free. He subsequently joined Lu Keqian's Xiaodong Regeneration Society shortly following the [[Corrective Revolution (Xiaodong)|Corrective Revolution]] once again becoming part of Lu's inner circle despite his non-military background. Li during the [[Xiaodongese Civil War]] was responsible for accumulating a large amount of funds for Lu's forces through the yuanminghui (criminal syndicates). For this reason Li accrued infamy amongst Lu's supporters as "one-eyed Xu's dog" (a reference to yuanminghui leader [[Xu Huangzhi]]) but was respected by Lu for his talents and loyalty. | |||
Li's | Following the victory of Lu's forces in 1940 Li was appointed Governor of the Luoyan province and Governing Mayor of Baiqiao. Initially a supporter of state chairman [[Wu Jinmao]]'s hardline national principalist faction within the Regeneration Society following Lu's death in 1945 he shifted to support Legislative Council president [[Ma Renzhong]]'s bureaucratic faction. As Governor of Luoyan and Baiqiao Li was able to accumulate a wide network of supporters within the Regeneration Society from the city and province which continued after he resigned from both positions in 1947 to take up the role of Minister of Industry and Public Enterprises. Through a mixture of his skill in navigating Xiaodong's bureaucratic state alongside his strong factional support and connections to organised crime Li was recognised as one of the more effective members of the government leading him to be promoted by Ma to vice-premier in 1952 that entitled him a seat on the State Presidium, the highest governing body of the state. Li also became Secretary-General of the Xiaodong Regeneration Society which gave him control over personnel within the Society enabling him to promote his own factional supporters and marginalise support for [[Premier of Xiaodong|premier]] [[Chen Xuecheng]]. His 1941 marriage to [[Lu Fangliang]], Lu Keqian's daugther, also increased his standing. | ||
Following Ma's death in 1961 Li was able to outmanoeuvre Chen to become State Chairman and thereby Xiaodong's {{wp|paramount leader}} both due to the strong support from his own faction within the Xiaodongese government and the fears of the former-socialist Chen being to left-wing. | |||
Known as a hardliner towards Senria but more moderate in domestic affairs, as State Chairman Li continued the economic doctrine of {{wp|dirigisme}}, [[Three Fundamentals]] foreign policy and consensus-based government of his predecessor, whilst becoming more hardline in regards to [[Senria]] - under his rule, Senrian Prime Minister [[Tokiyasu Kitamura]] was assassinated by Xiaodongese agents. Li's government also promoted {{wp|social conservatism}} and cracked down on pro-democracy forces, although it tolerated the so-called "loyal dissidents". Under Li, {{wp|inflation}} increased as the Xiaodongese economy started to see a slowndown in the impressive growth that defined the 1950's - as a result, Li shifted focus from {{wp|heavy industry}} to {{wp|light industry}}. In 1964 he repressed the [[1964 Chanwanese riots]] and ended the autonomy of [[Chanwan]] enforcing {{wp|direct rule}}. | |||
Li's government over time became more renown for high levels of corruption and links with organised crime. In 1968 he controversially dismissed longtime premier Chen in favour of his wife Lu Fangliang, an act that alienated the military alongside some of his key supporters. Continuing corruption and a decline in rice prices in 1970 led to the surprise 1970 coup d'état by elements of the military that sought to reinforce more ideological governance in Xiaodong. After failing to secure the support [[Shujichu]] chief and key powerbroker [[Sun Yuting]] during the coup Li resigned as State Chairman and went into exile alongside his family to [[Gaullica]]. | |||
Li would remain in [[Verlois]] for the rest of his life with the new military government denying his re-entry into Xiaodong out of the fear that he would attempt to lead an uprising to place himself back in office. He died of {{wp|Intracerebral hemorrhage}} in 1978 in his Verlois home. His family was allowed to re-enter Xiaodong six years later by then-State Chairman [[Qian Xingwen]], with his daugther [[Lu Yanling]] subsequently becoming involved in politics. | |||
Initially a very popular leader, Li's reputation has declined over time due to the corrupt nature of his governance and connections with organised crime. His immediate successors pointed to the Li regime as a "''betrayal of the national principalist spirit''" and of "''bureaucratising the corrective revolution''". However since the repression of the 1970's and economic dislocation of the 1980's and 1990's Li has undergone somewhat more positive assessments as an opportunist yet successful leader who engineered significant economic growth and social stability. | |||
==Early life and education== | ==Early life and education== | ||
<div style="display:none;"> | |||
Li Zhaozheng was born in [[Rongzhuo]] in [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Empire|Xiaodong]] in 1892. He was the fourth son of a wealthy landlords and the second to come from the landlords wife rather than one of his {{wp|concubines}}. As a young man, Li enjoyed wrestling, drinking and entertaining friends. | Li Zhaozheng was born in [[Rongzhuo]] in [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Empire|Xiaodong]] in 1892. He was the fourth son of a wealthy landlords and the second to come from the landlords wife rather than one of his {{wp|concubines}}. As a young man, Li enjoyed wrestling, drinking and entertaining friends. | ||
Li initially hoped to advance into the ranks of the scholar-bureaucrats, but after failing an imperial examination decided instead to join the [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Army]] in 1912, becoming a {{wp|lieutenant}} by virtue of his noble heritage. In 1914 he married Li Ningmei, who was eight years in his junior and had his first child, a boy named Li Rushi, a year later. | Li initially hoped to advance into the ranks of the scholar-bureaucrats, but after failing an imperial examination decided instead to join the [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Army]] in 1912, becoming a {{wp|lieutenant}} by virtue of his noble heritage. In 1914 he married Li Ningmei, who was eight years in his junior and had his first child, a boy named Li Rushi, a year later. | ||
[[File:ZhouEnlai3.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Li Zhaozheng as a member of the [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Army]]]]In 1922 Li was appointed as a military attaché in [[Ankoren]], where he was present in the [[Ashura Revolution]], [[Ankoreni Revolutionary War]] and the [[Azkuri Genocide]]. Writing at the time, Li stated that the new Ankoreni government could be a model Xiaodong could learn from. | [[File:ZhouEnlai3.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Li Zhaozheng as a member of the [[Heavenly Xiaodongese Army]]]]In 1922 Li was appointed as a military attaché in [[Ankoren]], where he was present in the [[Ashura Revolution]], [[Ankoreni Revolutionary War]] and the [[Azkuri Genocide]]. Writing at the time, Li stated that the new Ankoreni government could be a model Xiaodong could learn from. | ||
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During the [[Xiaodongese Civil War]] Li led forces opposed to the independent Duljunese republic formed by [[Jamuken Mu]]. Li commanded forces during the 1937 northern offensive which saw several successive victories by Xiaodongese forces in Duljun, culminating in the siege of Henjintao. Li's army took Henjintao on the 18<sup>th</sup> December 1937, but were unable to push further into the north of Duljun due to the army's exhausted supply lines. Li was redeployed to serve as the military governor of Henjintao with general Zhou Hongkui leading the final offensive against Duljunese forces in March 1938. | During the [[Xiaodongese Civil War]] Li led forces opposed to the independent Duljunese republic formed by [[Jamuken Mu]]. Li commanded forces during the 1937 northern offensive which saw several successive victories by Xiaodongese forces in Duljun, culminating in the siege of Henjintao. Li's army took Henjintao on the 18<sup>th</sup> December 1937, but were unable to push further into the north of Duljun due to the army's exhausted supply lines. Li was redeployed to serve as the military governor of Henjintao with general Zhou Hongkui leading the final offensive against Duljunese forces in March 1938. | ||
</div> | |||
==Government career== | ==Government career== | ||
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In 1938 Li was promoted to the Council of Ministers by [[Lu Keqian]] as the Minister of International Trade as well as the executive committee of the Regeneration Society. As International Trade Minister Li applied a series of tariffs to foreign goods whilst attempting to renegotiate several loans accrued during the civil war. In 1943 his wife Li died of tuberculosis. | In 1938 Li was promoted to the Council of Ministers by [[Lu Keqian]] as the Minister of International Trade as well as the executive committee of the Regeneration Society. As International Trade Minister Li applied a series of tariffs to foreign goods whilst attempting to renegotiate several loans accrued during the civil war. In 1943 his wife Li died of tuberculosis. | ||
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Despite Chen being seen as a hardliner, in office he soon implemented several liberal reforms that became known as the Xiaodongese Spring. These included a liberalisation of the press, greater rights to protest and form political associations and the gradual abolition of cultural controls. Li opposed these political developments and soon became seen as the most prominent leader of the internal party opposition to Chen, being aided by the connections his wife Lu Fangliang had as a member of the Lu dynasty. In 1956 Chen performed a u-turn and reimposed several authoritarian policies, leading to a collapse of his support amongst moderate members of the regime. Li subsequently at a Regeneration Society Plenum in 1957 was able to cajole enough delegates into voting to remove Chen from the leadership, with Li being promoted in his place. | Despite Chen being seen as a hardliner, in office he soon implemented several liberal reforms that became known as the Xiaodongese Spring. These included a liberalisation of the press, greater rights to protest and form political associations and the gradual abolition of cultural controls. Li opposed these political developments and soon became seen as the most prominent leader of the internal party opposition to Chen, being aided by the connections his wife Lu Fangliang had as a member of the Lu dynasty. In 1956 Chen performed a u-turn and reimposed several authoritarian policies, leading to a collapse of his support amongst moderate members of the regime. Li subsequently at a Regeneration Society Plenum in 1957 was able to cajole enough delegates into voting to remove Chen from the leadership, with Li being promoted in his place. | ||
== | </div> | ||
==State Chairman== | |||
<div style="display:none;"> | |||
Upon coming to power Li appointed his long time colleague and friend [[Shen Jinping]] as Second Minister and Vice-Chairman of the Regeneration Society. The appointment was considered controversial amongst the ruling elite, with Li being accused of {{wp|cornyism}}. During his time in office Li promoted predominantly his own allies, who were centred in the [[Shujichu]] and former Peace Preservation Brigades. Li's consensus style of government resulted in political stagnation, with the ruling elite become a {{wp|oligarchy|oligarchic}} {{wp|gerontocracy}} under Li. He also allowed his wife Lu - whom he appointed Presiding Officer of the State Presidium - to have a much greater role in politics leading to her to be nicknamed as the "real First Minister". This close knit style of decision making became controversial, especially regarding Li's candidates for State Chairman - first upstart Mayor of Rongzhuo and internal rival [[Qiao Zhaohui]] in 1960 thereby removing him from any real influence and in 1967 [[Lu Deijiang]] the son of Lu Keqian and brother to Lu Fangliang, leading to accusations of a {{Wp|family dictatorship}}. | Upon coming to power Li appointed his long time colleague and friend [[Shen Jinping]] as Second Minister and Vice-Chairman of the Regeneration Society. The appointment was considered controversial amongst the ruling elite, with Li being accused of {{wp|cornyism}}. During his time in office Li promoted predominantly his own allies, who were centred in the [[Shujichu]] and former Peace Preservation Brigades. Li's consensus style of government resulted in political stagnation, with the ruling elite become a {{wp|oligarchy|oligarchic}} {{wp|gerontocracy}} under Li. He also allowed his wife Lu - whom he appointed Presiding Officer of the State Presidium - to have a much greater role in politics leading to her to be nicknamed as the "real First Minister". This close knit style of decision making became controversial, especially regarding Li's candidates for State Chairman - first upstart Mayor of Rongzhuo and internal rival [[Qiao Zhaohui]] in 1960 thereby removing him from any real influence and in 1967 [[Lu Deijiang]] the son of Lu Keqian and brother to Lu Fangliang, leading to accusations of a {{Wp|family dictatorship}}. | ||
===Economic policy=== | ===Economic policy=== | ||
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In 1962 Li signed an agreement with [[Ankoren]] which allowed Xiaodong to buy Ankoreni oil at discounted prices. Li since his time as a military attaché had been a proponent of Ankoreni-Xiaodongese ties, and during his time in office heavily promoting deepening relations with Ankoren. Li was in favour of creating an "[[Estanban]]-[[Rongzhuo]]" axis and is credited as the architect of modern Ankoreni-Xiaodongese relations. | In 1962 Li signed an agreement with [[Ankoren]] which allowed Xiaodong to buy Ankoreni oil at discounted prices. Li since his time as a military attaché had been a proponent of Ankoreni-Xiaodongese ties, and during his time in office heavily promoting deepening relations with Ankoren. Li was in favour of creating an "[[Estanban]]-[[Rongzhuo]]" axis and is credited as the architect of modern Ankoreni-Xiaodongese relations. | ||
== | </div> | ||
==Exile== | |||
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In October 1965 Li suffered a deliberating stroke that left the right side of his body paralysed, leading to Li to delegate considerable powers to his wife, Presiding Officer of the State Presidium [[Lu Fangliang]]. During the last two years of his rule Li governed with Lu in a {{wp|Diarchy|duumvirate}}. Li promoted Lu and maneuvered allies to support her, calling Lu the woman best fit to carry out his legacy. | In October 1965 Li suffered a deliberating stroke that left the right side of his body paralysed, leading to Li to delegate considerable powers to his wife, Presiding Officer of the State Presidium [[Lu Fangliang]]. During the last two years of his rule Li governed with Lu in a {{wp|Diarchy|duumvirate}}. Li promoted Lu and maneuvered allies to support her, calling Lu the woman best fit to carry out his legacy. | ||
By April 1966 Li, a heavy smoker, had recorded a serious decline in his health. His doctor that month said his central nervous system was rapidly deteriorating, and that he was suffering from insomnia. In October 1966 he underwent a severe stroke that deprived him of his ability to speak and paralysed him from the waist down, although he refused to resign. Li was a ''de facto'' figurehead for the final months of his rule as Lu carried out the duties of his office with Li mostly approving of policies proposed from within the Council of Ministers. In March 1967 Li suffered a third and fatal stroke, dying in his hospital bed at 2:00AM. | By April 1966 Li, a heavy smoker, had recorded a serious decline in his health. His doctor that month said his central nervous system was rapidly deteriorating, and that he was suffering from insomnia. In October 1966 he underwent a severe stroke that deprived him of his ability to speak and paralysed him from the waist down, although he refused to resign. Li was a ''de facto'' figurehead for the final months of his rule as Lu carried out the duties of his office with Li mostly approving of policies proposed from within the Council of Ministers. In March 1967 Li suffered a third and fatal stroke, dying in his hospital bed at 2:00AM. | ||
</div> | |||
==Assessment== | ==Assessment== | ||
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When Li died in 1967, he was hailed as one of Xiaodong's best leaders, with many mourning his death. Li's consumer socialism was received well by the people after years of austerity and rendered him a popular leader alongside his expansion of social welfare provision. | When Li died in 1967, he was hailed as one of Xiaodong's best leaders, with many mourning his death. Li's consumer socialism was received well by the people after years of austerity and rendered him a popular leader alongside his expansion of social welfare provision. | ||
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Li remains despised in [[Duljun]] where he is seen as being one of the principal architects of anti-Duljunese policies. However, many ethnic Xiaodongese in Duljun continue to hold Li in high regard. | Li remains despised in [[Duljun]] where he is seen as being one of the principal architects of anti-Duljunese policies. However, many ethnic Xiaodongese in Duljun continue to hold Li in high regard. | ||
</div> | |||
[[Category:Xiaodong]][[Category:Xiaodong people]] | [[Category:Xiaodong]][[Category:Xiaodong people]] |
Revision as of 20:17, 19 September 2020
Lǐ Zhǎozhèng | |
---|---|
里找正 | |
4th State Chairman of Xiaodong | |
In office 7th September 1961 – 31st March 1970 | |
Premier | Chen Xuechang Lu Fangliang |
Preceded by | Ma Renzhong |
Succeeded by | Sun Yuting |
Vice-Premier of Xiaodong | |
In office 20nd October 1952 – 7th September 1961 | |
Premier | Chen Xuechang |
Preceded by | Tao Guangmei |
Succeeded by | Li Shengjun |
Member of the State Presidium of Xiaodong | |
In office 20nd October 1952 – 21st March 1970 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Kuoqing, Luoyuan Province, Xiaodong | December 8, 1900
Died | June 21, 1978 Verlois, Gaullica | (aged 77)
Political party | Xiaodong Regeneration Society |
Spouse(s) | Li Ningmei (1915-1936) Lu Fangliang (1941-1978) |
Children | Li Rishi Lu Guojiao Lu Yanling |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Heavenly Xiaodongese Empire (1918-1920) |
Branch/service | Heavenly Xiaodongese Army (1918-1920) |
Battles/wars | Senrian-Xiaodongese War |
Other offices held
| |
Li Zhaozheng (Xiaodongese: 里找正; Lǐ Zhǎozhèng; 8th December 1900-21st June 1978, aged 77) was a Xiaodongese politician who served as the State Chairman of Xiaodong and Chairman of the Xiaodong Regeneration Society from September 1961 following the death of Ma Renzhong to March 1970 when he was ousted in the 1970 Xiaodongese coup d'état. He previously served as vice-premier from 1952 to 1961, secretary-general of the Xiaodong Regeneration Society from 1952 to 1961 to 1952, Minister of Industry and Public Enterprises from 1947 to 1952 and Governing Mayor of Baiqiao and Governor of the Luoyuan Province from 1940 to 1947.
Born in a wealthy landowners family, Li enlisted in the army in 1918 but moved shortly afterwards to work in the Finance Ministry. During the Great War Li worked for the ministry of munitions initially as a low level bureaucrat before rising through the ministry due to his ability to handle the complex food distribution system in Xiaodong during the war. Li was during his time in the Ministry accused of using criminal connections and slave labour to generate enough rice to meet military quota's. In 1934 when Lu Keqian was appointed Munitions Minister Li became one of his closest associates.
Li was captured by Senrian forces in 1935 following the fall of Baiqiao and briefly detained in a Senrian prison camp in the city before being let free. He subsequently joined Lu Keqian's Xiaodong Regeneration Society shortly following the Corrective Revolution once again becoming part of Lu's inner circle despite his non-military background. Li during the Xiaodongese Civil War was responsible for accumulating a large amount of funds for Lu's forces through the yuanminghui (criminal syndicates). For this reason Li accrued infamy amongst Lu's supporters as "one-eyed Xu's dog" (a reference to yuanminghui leader Xu Huangzhi) but was respected by Lu for his talents and loyalty.
Following the victory of Lu's forces in 1940 Li was appointed Governor of the Luoyan province and Governing Mayor of Baiqiao. Initially a supporter of state chairman Wu Jinmao's hardline national principalist faction within the Regeneration Society following Lu's death in 1945 he shifted to support Legislative Council president Ma Renzhong's bureaucratic faction. As Governor of Luoyan and Baiqiao Li was able to accumulate a wide network of supporters within the Regeneration Society from the city and province which continued after he resigned from both positions in 1947 to take up the role of Minister of Industry and Public Enterprises. Through a mixture of his skill in navigating Xiaodong's bureaucratic state alongside his strong factional support and connections to organised crime Li was recognised as one of the more effective members of the government leading him to be promoted by Ma to vice-premier in 1952 that entitled him a seat on the State Presidium, the highest governing body of the state. Li also became Secretary-General of the Xiaodong Regeneration Society which gave him control over personnel within the Society enabling him to promote his own factional supporters and marginalise support for premier Chen Xuecheng. His 1941 marriage to Lu Fangliang, Lu Keqian's daugther, also increased his standing.
Following Ma's death in 1961 Li was able to outmanoeuvre Chen to become State Chairman and thereby Xiaodong's paramount leader both due to the strong support from his own faction within the Xiaodongese government and the fears of the former-socialist Chen being to left-wing.
Known as a hardliner towards Senria but more moderate in domestic affairs, as State Chairman Li continued the economic doctrine of dirigisme, Three Fundamentals foreign policy and consensus-based government of his predecessor, whilst becoming more hardline in regards to Senria - under his rule, Senrian Prime Minister Tokiyasu Kitamura was assassinated by Xiaodongese agents. Li's government also promoted social conservatism and cracked down on pro-democracy forces, although it tolerated the so-called "loyal dissidents". Under Li, inflation increased as the Xiaodongese economy started to see a slowndown in the impressive growth that defined the 1950's - as a result, Li shifted focus from heavy industry to light industry. In 1964 he repressed the 1964 Chanwanese riots and ended the autonomy of Chanwan enforcing direct rule.
Li's government over time became more renown for high levels of corruption and links with organised crime. In 1968 he controversially dismissed longtime premier Chen in favour of his wife Lu Fangliang, an act that alienated the military alongside some of his key supporters. Continuing corruption and a decline in rice prices in 1970 led to the surprise 1970 coup d'état by elements of the military that sought to reinforce more ideological governance in Xiaodong. After failing to secure the support Shujichu chief and key powerbroker Sun Yuting during the coup Li resigned as State Chairman and went into exile alongside his family to Gaullica.
Li would remain in Verlois for the rest of his life with the new military government denying his re-entry into Xiaodong out of the fear that he would attempt to lead an uprising to place himself back in office. He died of Intracerebral hemorrhage in 1978 in his Verlois home. His family was allowed to re-enter Xiaodong six years later by then-State Chairman Qian Xingwen, with his daugther Lu Yanling subsequently becoming involved in politics.
Initially a very popular leader, Li's reputation has declined over time due to the corrupt nature of his governance and connections with organised crime. His immediate successors pointed to the Li regime as a "betrayal of the national principalist spirit" and of "bureaucratising the corrective revolution". However since the repression of the 1970's and economic dislocation of the 1980's and 1990's Li has undergone somewhat more positive assessments as an opportunist yet successful leader who engineered significant economic growth and social stability.