Xi just changed the rules of the game in China - and that makes things scarier for everyone

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Xi Jinping

REUTERS/Bogdan Cristel

The rules of engagement have changed in China.

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There was a time when loyalty to the party, and loyalty to President Xi Jinping, meant the government left you alone.

But there is now a crisis on, and even those who thought they might be safe from the President's ongoing corruption drive need to watch their backs.

Someone has to take the fall for a crashing stock market, a slowing economy, and the 145 people killed as a result of an industrial accident in Tianjin earlier this month.

And it's not going to be President Xi Jinping.

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On Thursday the news broke that Liao Hong, president & editor-in-chief of The People's Daily Online, is under investigation.

The news has set the country abuzz, and not because yet another powerful figure in China has been taken down.

Liao runs a publication that has shown nothing but loyalty to the government. George Chen, managing editor of Hong Kong publication The South China Morning Post, calls The People's Daily a "party mouthpiece."

It seems the mouthpiece isn't on message.

It's hard to be on message these days. Websites have been censoring information about the country's' five day stock market crash which began last Friday and ended with a rally on Thursday.

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Angela Merkel and China's President Xi Jinping

REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and China's President Xi Jinping arrive for an agreement signing at the Chancellery in Berlin March 28, 2014.

The rumor among Chinese netizens is journalists and executives at Xinhua, the official news agency of the Chinese government, should watch their backs next.

There are also reports that Chinese Premier Li Keqiang is taking the blame for China's stock market turmoil. On June 12, the market started to crash. It was Keqiang, according to reports, who was charged with stopping the bleeding then.

His heavy-handed intervention did little to calm markets, and some say he made things even worse.

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"The authorities have been too involved in the stock market and now they're trying to pass the responsibilities to others," Hu Xingdou, an economics professor at the Beijing Institute of Technology told Bloomberg.

"In fact, they have to be responsible for the market crisis. It's the authorities trying to act like a referee and a player at the same time."

There are some in the party who would like to take Keqiang out of the game entirely, according to the Financial Times.

Xi has already weakened the power of the Premiership by creating "small leading groups" on a wide range of issues that were once under the purview of the Premier's office. The power of these leading groups supersedes the power of every other office, essentially rendering the Premier toothless.

Li Keqiang

Ruben Sprich/Reuters

China's Premier Li Keqiang speaks during The Global Impact of China's Economic Transformation event in the Swiss mountain resort of Davos January 21, 2015.

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Of course, the more traditional scapegoats are also being thrown into the fire as well.

On Tuesday the government said that now is the time to "purify" the stock market, so that means some bankers have to go down. One of China's most powerful banks, Citic Securities, is under investigation along with people connected to the China Securities Regulatory Commission and employees at Caijing, China's most respected business magazine.

All of them are accused of illegal trading and spreading false information.

As for the recent explosions at a chemical facility in Tianjin, 12 officials were arrested on Thursday for corruption and dereliction of their duties.

This isn't even close to the end of these arrests and investigations. Xi has a lot of house cleaning to do, and no one is safe.

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