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Public opinion struggle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Public opinion struggle (Chinese: 舆论斗争; pinyin: Yúlùn dòuzhēng) is a term used by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to describe its ideology and propaganda work. Since Xi Jinping became the CCP general secretary in 2012, the term has frequently appeared in the party's internal and external propaganda documents and leadership speeches.

History

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The phrase was first mentioned in the People’s Daily in 1980, but did not enter into common use until 2013; nearly all the previous uses were mentions of "international public opinion struggle" or against superstition. On 19 August 2013, Xi Jinping gave a speech at the National Ideological and Propaganda Work Conference in what was later known as the August 19 speech. Initial reporting of the speech did not mention the term public opinion struggle. On 21 August, the General Political Department of the People's Liberation Army issued a notice on the study and interpretation of Xi’s, which said that the speech included several key issues, including "positive propaganda and the public opinion struggle". On 24 August, the CCP tabloid newspaper Global Times published an editorial titled "The Public Opinion Struggle: A Challenge We Cannot Avoid But Must Face Head On".[1] In reaction, on 27 August, Cao Lin wrote an article in the China Youth Daily titled "The Term ‘Public Opinion Struggle’ Makes People Uneasy", saying that "Using the term ‘public opinion struggle’ to characterize the current ideological conflict ushers us back into the past".[2]

On 30 August, the People's Daily published an editorial titled "A Scientific Guide to Consolidating and Strengthening Mainstream Ideology and Public Opinion", which called to "effectively channel public opinion and actively launch a public opinion struggle"; the article was attributed to the People’s Daily editorial board, first such attribution since 1946. The People's Daily editorial numerous other news agencies issued their own articles on the topic.[1][3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Gang, Qian (2013-09-24). "Parsing the "Public Opinion Struggle"". China Media Project. Retrieved 2025-03-30.
  2. ^ Fisher, Max (2014-05-19). "You have to be careful about using the word 'struggle' in China". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2025-03-30.
  3. ^ Bandurski, David (2014-01-06). "China's political discourse in 2013". China Media Project. Retrieved 2025-03-30.