Yan, Yang and Yang, Zhusong

Portraying competence, benevolence, or party loyalty? Political propaganda and the image-building of political elites in China - Comparative Politics - 57(4), Jul, 2025: p.529-550

How do political elites in authoritarian regimes shape their public image? Drawing on a unique dataset covering official news releases of the daily public activities of all provincial party secretaries in China from 2016 to 2022, this study finds that authoritarian elites manipulate the propaganda apparatus to project various public images. Text analysis shows that provincial leaders employ a variety of themes and narratives to highlight their activities, resulting in four types of images: competence-oriented, benevolence-oriented, party-loyalty-oriented, and versatile. Case studies reveal how the configuration of conditions, such as the official’s age, professional background, political connections with the top leader, and the socioeconomic characteristics of their province, relate to their image-building strategies. The findings, which are supported by methods including topic modeling, machine learning, and fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis, contribute to the literature on political propaganda by emphasizing the diversity of public images among senior political elites in non-democratic systems.- Reproduced


https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/cuny/cp/2025/00000057/00000004/art00006



China, Competence, Loyalty, Political elites, Propaganda, Public image.