“…Network-based promotion schools argue that networks are more important than merit in Chinese officials' political promotion. In modern Chinese political research, the network that has been called guanxi (关系) by the Chinese plays an extremely vital role (Dittmer, 1995;Moody, 2009), the princelings' powerful family background has been considered crucial for them to win higher party ranks (Zheng and Fook, 2003;Zheng and Chen, 2009;Zeng, 2013), and the patron-client tie has been mentioned as an essential factor in selecting members of China's supreme decision-making body, the so-called Politburo Standing Committee (Li, 2012a(Li, , 2012b. The main assumption of network-based promotion theories is that Chinese leaders have to select loyal followers to survive fierce factional conflicts or maintain their political influence even in retirement (Pye, 1992;MacFarquhar and Schoenhals, 2006).…”