John Oliver Takes on the Dual Personas of China’s “Uncle Xi”
Image via HBO/YouTube
Let’s just say it: Americans have a limited knowledge of China’s government. Most of us know that a whole lot of our stuff comes from there and that if you say “China” three times into a mirror, Donald Trump will appear to yell about how they’re stealing our jobs, but that’s about it. As John Oliver points out in this week’s Last Week Tonight, for a long time, that lack of understanding was intentional, but now, under the subversive influence of Chinese president Xi Jinping, China is expanding its influence on a global scale.
Since assuming the presidency in 2013, Xi has quickly established himself as China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong. His popularity stems largely from China’s impressive economic growth (though that growth spurt started long before he took office). As Oliver notes, over the last 30 years, the expansion of China’s economy has helped lift 800 million people out of poverty, and this new middle class backs Xi. In addition, Chinese lawmakers voted on March 11 to eliminate presidential term limits in China’s constitution. The measure passed 2,958 to two, essentially granting Xi the opportunity to rule indefinitely and eliminating what Oliver calls any “post-Mao guardrails.”
Xi has used his massive influence to develop his signature project, the Belt and Road Initiative. The $1 trillion (not billion, a trillion, the one with 12 zeros) project aims to reshape infrastructure and global trade routes to place China squarely in the center of that new network. China is no longer hiding its strength, as was the policy of previous presidents. Instead, the project has been openly advertised via a video of children singing cheerily about infrastructure expansion … in English.
Xi, nicknamed the cuddly “Uncle Xi,” depicts himself as a man of the people. He represents himself as China’s equivalent of folksy; swap the “I could grab a beer with him” sentiments your one uncle harbored for George W. Bush with a pork bun. Oliver jokes that though Americans expect leaders to be pictured wolfing down junk food (as photographs of every president from Eisenhower through Trump eating ice cream are shown in the sidebar), this is unusual, but effective, behavior from a Chinese president.