China Ousts Another High-Ranking Military Leader as Purge Deepens

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Miao Hua, who oversaw the entire military’s loyalty to the CCP for seven years as an ally of Xi Jinping, has been expelled from the rubber-stamped legislature.
A senior member of the Chinese military elite has been removed as delegate to the Communist Party-run legislature, a development that casts a shadow over the fate of another longtime ally of leader Xi Jinping.
China announced the decision late on Wednesday to expel Adm. Miao Hua in an online statement from the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress.
Miao held the position of director of the Political Work Department for seven years before being suspended last November. This crucial role oversees the military’s ideological loyalty to the Communist Party and is key in determining the promotion of senior military officers.
He has served as a member of the Party’s Central Military Commission (CMC) since October 2017.
The CMC commands the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and represents one of the highest echelons of power in China. When Xi unveiled the leadership lineup following the 20th Party congress in October 2022, two vice chairmen and four members were on the CMC.
Experts who track China’s military interpreted Wednesday’s announcement as an indicator of Miao’s downfall.
“It seems to be an official acknowledgment that Miao Hua has either been found to be corrupt, politically disloyal, or is preparing to take any actions against Xi Jinping,” Shen Ming-Shih, a research fellow at the Institute for National Defense and Security Research, a think tank funded by the Taiwanese government, told The Epoch Times.
The removal of Miao came amid growing speculation about the fate of Gen. He Weidong, the vice chair of CMC and a member of the Politburo, the Party’s second-highest tier of power.
He, the military’s No. 3 officer, has missed at least three key political events this month in which all CMC leaders were expected to appear. The most recent one was the Politburo’s study session on April 25. Footage broadcast on state television CCTV showed that the session was attended by Politburo’s all 24 members except top diplomat Wang Yi, who was on a visit to Kazakhstan, and He Weidong.

Gen. He Weidong, vice chairman of China's Central Military Commission (CMC), attends the opening ceremony of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in Beijing on March 4, 2025. Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty Images
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“We have responded to this question before,” Zhang Xiaogang, the ministry’s spokesman, told reporters.
For Taiwanese researcher Shen, who has long studied China and the PLA, the general’s continued absence from major events indicates that he may have fallen from grace.
Nevertheless, Shen said if the general were confirmed to have been purged, it would embarrass Xi, whose ties with He date back over two decades in Fujian, a coastal province in southern China.
“The CMC initially had seven members, but now only has four left. Xi Jinping is also embarrassed now,” Shen said.
Luo Ya contributed to this report.
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