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Ma Xingrui’s Downfall Sparks Speculation Over CCP Internal Power Struggles

Ma Xingrui (马兴瑞), a member of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Politburo and former Party Secretary of Xinjiang, was officially announced to have fallen from power on April 3 after being absent from public view for eight months.

Ma, 66, is originally from Yuncheng, Shandong Province, and is reported to have close ties to Xi Jinping’s wife, Peng Liyuan, as they are both from Shandong. After being removed from his post as Xinjiang Party Secretary in July last year, he was reassigned as deputy head of the Central Rural Work Leading Group, a position he held until his dismissal.

His career was marked by cross-regional and cross-sector experience: he rose as a technocrat in China’s aerospace sector before entering local politics in Guangdong, where he served as head of the provincial Political and Legal Affairs Commission, Party Secretary of Shenzhen, and Governor of Guangdong. He was later transferred to Xinjiang and promoted to the CCP Politburo at the 20th Party Congress.

Some overseas commentators suggest that Ma’s downfall points to internal power struggles within the CCP leadership and may indicate a weakened Xi Jinping as he has to cut an associate loyal to him (and his wife).

Independent political commentator Cai Shenkun offered another perspective in an interview with New Tang Dynasty TV (NTDTV) on April 3, stating that while the case appears to involve corruption, it may have exposed a complex and concealed network of relationships—something highly sensitive within the CCP system. He alleged that Ma’s wife, Rong Li, provided Hong Kong insurance policies worth millions to tens of millions of yuan to the spouses and children of senior officials. These exchanges, framed as personal favors rather than bribery, reportedly involved a wide network of individuals and could contribute to form political alliances or even foster factionalism. Xi would view it as a potential threat to his authority and will not tolerate it.

Source: Epoch Times, April 4, 2026
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/26/4/4/n14734648.htm