In Chongqing, Bo Xilai's support endures in face of Beijing's new assault on his legacy

By Philip Wen

CHONGQING, China, July 26 (Reuters) - In this steamy metropolis of more than 30 million people on the banks of the Yangtze River, it doesn’t take much to find people who still talk in reverential terms about Bo Xilai, Chongqing’s incarcerated and disgraced former Communist Party head who was removed from office more than five years ago.

By contrast, it is difficult to find anyone who has similar regard for Sun Zhengcai, who lost the same Chongqing party job earlier this month after being accused by Beijing of failing to rid the city of Bo's influence and legacy.

People remember Bo fondly as a can-do leader who improved law and order, turbo-charged the economy, and rejuvenated dilapidated old city quarters.

"Bo did a great job with law and order in the city," said Tan Heping, one of the city's dwindling number of iconic bangbang, or "stick men", who carry loads on bamboo poles up and down the city's steep hillsides. "Sun is nowhere near as impressive, he is far from what Bo Xilai was. I can't see what he has done."

Both Bo and Sun were removed in the months ahead of gatherings of top leaders at the Chinese Communist Party National Congress, which is held every five years and is where major leadership changes are ratified. Sun took over in Chongqing in November 2012 from top party official Zhang Dejiang, who held the position for just eight months after Bo's departure.

At the 2012 Congress, Xi Jinping was confirmed as China’s national leader and at this autumn's Congress he is widely expected to consolidate his power by moving supporters into key leadership positions, and as a result have a greater say in any succession planning.

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The telegenic Bo, regarded widely as one of the most charismatic Chinese politicians of his generation, was a contender for the top leadership before being felled for corruption in a sensational 2012 scandal that also saw his wife jailed for murdering a British businessman. Bo’s popularity, ruthlessly ambitious behavior and individualistic streak had been seen among top officials at the time as a potential threat to the central leadership.

Marrying his overt western-style retail politician charm with a Mao-era propaganda strategy, Bo had bypassed Communist Party messaging to build his own brand. Tapping into public anger at official corruption, he espoused a return to simpler, more traditional Chinese values, and organised mass rallies of tens of thousands singing patriotic revolutionary-era songs amid a sea of red flags.

And with police chief and right-hand man Wang Lijun, he launched a high-profile campaign against Chongqing's deep-rooted organised crime rings.