Lüqiu Xiaotong

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His Excellency
Lüqiu Xiaotong
陆秋晓彤
Mr. Lee Kuan Yew Mayoral reception 1965 (cropped).jpg
Lüqiu Xiaotong in 1970
14th President of China
In office
25 January 1982 – 23 February 1987
PremierZhu Min
(1982–83)
Li Hwei-ru
(1983-86)
Luísa Wong
(1986-88)
Vice PresidentYang Lei
Cao Fen
Preceded byTatiana Antonova
Succeeded byCao Fen
27th Premier of China
In office
21 January 1968 – 11 April 1970
PresidentYuni Tian
Preceded byZhao Lei
Succeeded bySu Wuying
Leader of the Patriotic Labour Party
In office
4 March 1965 – 15 December 1970
DeputySima Jia
Preceded byPosition Established
Succeeded byHu Yaobang
Minister of Economic Affairs
In office
9 February 1962 – 27 November 1964
PremierSima Jia
Preceded byDeng Xiaoping
Succeeded byNa Mu
Chairman of the
Western China Development Authority
In office
10 March 1960 – 9 February 1962
PremierSima Jia
Preceded byYu Qiuli
Succeeded byMa Hong
Member of the Legislative Yuan
In office
9 February 1962 – 23 February 1987
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byLüqiu Tianqiao
ConstituencyYangpu (1968-87)
In office
4 February 1956 – 19 March 1960
Personal details
Born26 March 1924
Shanghai China
Died23 February 1987 (aged 62)
Lagos Nigeria
Cause of deathMalaria infection
Political partyPatriotic Labour Party (1965-1987)
Other political
affiliations
Solidarity (1956-1965)
Minmeng (Before 1956)
SpouseXia Jie
Children13, including Zhenglong and Tianqiao
ParentExpression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[".
EducationZhejiang University (BA)
London School of Economics (MA)
ProfessionEconomist
ReligionChinese folk religion
Three teachings
Military service
AllegianceFlag of the Republic of China.svg Republic of China
Branch/serviceNational Revolutionary Army
Years of service1947-1948
RankSergeant
Battles/warsWorld War II
Awards Order of Victory

Lüqiu Xiaotong (26 March 1924 - 23 February 1987) was a Chinese politician, economist, and political philosopher who served as Premier of China from 1968 to 1970 and President of China from 1982 to his death in 1987. Ideologically a Principled Communist and civic nationalist, Lüqiu promoted his philosophy of traditional socialism as a democratic socialist alternative to the Marxism-Leninism of the French Commune and the liberal capitalism of the United States. Accordingly, as President Lüqiu led China to challenge France and the United States; first, Lüqiu funded anti-colonial guerrillas in French Indochina and French Africa, destabilizing the French Commune and leading to Operation Just Cause, a multilateral invasion of the French Commune, that led to the Commune's dissolution and the establishment of democratic socialist states in French Africa and social democratic states in Indochina and France proper; second, Lüqiu helped end the Sino-American alliance that existed since World War II and make the two countries each other's greatest rivals by, among other anti-American actions, helping form the International Solidarity Pact, a defense pact of democratic socialist states implicitly standing in opposition to the United States's Pacific-Atlantic Treaty Organization. These policies, amongst others, made Lüqiu Xiaotong one of the most consequential and controversial politicians in Chinese history.

Lüqiu Xiaotong was born in Shanghai in 1924 to a middle-class, politically active family supportive of the liberal Minmeng in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Lüqiu attended Zhejiang University as a student of political economy from 1942 to 1946, becaming a Marxist. After graduating from Zhejiang, Lüqiu enlisted in the National Revolutionary Army, serving as a Sergeant during the late stages of World War II. After the War ended, Lüqiu - traumatized thanks to his wartime experiences, although those he knew venerated him as a war hero - temporarily served as a Buddhist monk, a practice relatively common in Southeast Asia but less so in China. Lüqiu then studied international relations at the London School of Economics from 1949 to 1952, coming under Harold Laski's influence.

After graduating from the LSE, Lüqiu briefly served as an international liaison for the Chinese Solidarity and Labour Federation, a democratic socialist union federation and the largest trade union federation in China in the early 1950s which spearheaded the merger of the Minmeng's socialist faction and the Communist Party of China into the Workers' Party in 1953, swiftly banned under the Political Organizations Act. He subsequently became a professor development economics at Tsinghua University in 1953, promoting government-directed industrialisation and the ideas of Michal Kalecki, , particularly in relation to the importance of agrarian reform in economic development and the importance of the reserve army of labour.

Lüqiu was then nominated and successfully elected to the Legislative Yuan in 1956 as a member of the far-left Solidarity Party, formed by After independent, Workers' Party-aligned union activists. His academic and political background eventually caused the ruling Government to appoint him Chairman of the Western China Development Authority in 1960. Lüqiu performed admirably as Chair of the WCDA, helping spread spreading the prosperity of the early 1960s to the impoverished West, leading to his appointment as Minister of Economic Affairs in 1962. Then, Lüqiu's 1964 Martyrs' Blood speech, praising the Plural Left Coalition's economic policies and denouncing the KMT's campaigning tactics, catapulted him to national political prominence. Though the Plural Left Coalition failed to win reelection in 1964, the Spech helped elect Lüqiu Xiaotong Leader of the Patriotic Labour Party, a merger of the largest parties in the Plural Left Coalition, in 1965. As PLP Leader, his major electoral strategy - appealing to rural, historically KMT voters - mirrored his support for a social conservative-socialist alliance, which led him to author From Zongzu to Minsheng: On Tradition and Socialism, beginning the traditional socialist movement.

After the Patriotic Labour Party made gains during the 1968 parliamentary elections during an economic recession, Lüqiu Xiaotong became Premier at the helm ofa coalition government between the PLP, the Islamic socialist and regionalist Fidesian Workers' Coalition, and the centrist Progressive Party. During Lüqiu's Premiership, the government endeavored to establish a social-democratic welfare state, successfully establishing universal childcare and two free school meals daily through the Families First Program and old-age pensions through the State Pension Fund, though the Pension Fund only came into effect in 1980. Lüqiu's Premiership also enacted agrarian reform through the National Agricultural Board and Regional Agricultural Boards, enjoying a monopsony on staple crops and owning agricultural machinery and warehouses in accordance with the principle of an Ever-Normal Granary.