Highlights
- Baogang Group employees won first prize in a state-sponsored propaganda speech competition emphasizing Party loyalty and national spirit.
- The event demonstrates China’s strategy of using state-owned enterprises as ideological platforms, not just industrial producers.
- The competition highlights how Chinese corporations integrate political doctrine into workforce culture and corporate messaging.
In a striking show of state-aligned cultural performance, employees from Baogang Group, China’s state-owned steel and rare earth conglomerate, took first prize at the 2025 Inner Mongolia “Li Xiang Xin Zhengcheng” Theoretical Propaganda Speech Competition (opens in a new tab)—an event heavily promoted by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) as part of its nationwide ideological campaign.
Baogang’s team, composed of employees Yang Xinghua, Li Huayun, and Hou Ling, outperformed seven other finalist teams in a contest judged on Party loyalty, storytelling prowess, and alignment with official doctrine. Their presentation, titled “Three Spirits Fuel the Dream of a Strong Nation,” showcased personal tales of celebrated Baogang laborers—including coking technician Tang Sixiao and rare earth scientist Ye Zuguang—as living embodiments of “model worker,” “labor,” and “craftsman” spirit. The storytelling, imbued with emotion and CCP-aligned values, drew high praise from judges and a live audience across multiple state media platforms such as Xuexi Qiangguo, Prairie Cloud, and Pentium Media.
Out of more than 6,800 grassroots participants, only eight teams reached the final round after county and municipal eliminations. The competition is orchestrated by the Inner Mongolia Propaganda Department and closely affiliated with national ideological priorities.
While the event may appear routine, it underscores China’s deliberate use of SOEs like Baogang as ideological battlegrounds—not just industrial engines. Baogang isn’t just refining steel and rare earths—it’s also manufacturing political loyalty.
Why Relevant Westward?
Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) suggests that this competition illustrates how China’s state-owned giants operate as dual-function entities: industrial producers and ideological enforcers. Baogang’s commitment to embedding CCP doctrine into its workforce and public messaging reflects a governance model fundamentally different from liberal market systems.
For Western investors, regulators, and national security analysts, it’s a reminder: behind every ton of Baogang steel or kilogram of rare earths lies a politically conditioned workforce aligned with Party goals—potentially shaping corporate decisions, innovation priorities, and international engagement.
REEx Reflection
Baogang’s first-place finish in Inner Mongolia’s top propaganda speech contest may seem symbolic, but it reveals a deeper CCP strategy—welding industrial strength to ideological orthodoxy. As geopolitical tensions and industrial competition with China intensify, understanding this dual-track system is critical for the West. The latter while retaining incredible benefits, could learn and embrace more industrial policy to complete in what is a one-sided race at this point.
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