appoint people by favouritism
Cronyism, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R è NR é NW é IQ ī n, which means to choose people who are close to you, regardless of their virtue and talent. From the position of the Communist Party of China in the national war.
The origin of Idioms
Mao Zedong's "the position of the Communist Party of China in the national war" said: "in the past, Zhang Guotao's cadre policy was contrary to this. He carried out 'cronyism', drew in private parties and organized small factions."
Idiom usage
In addition, it has a derogatory meaning. Xu Zhucheng's old friend in wind and rain: "in personnel, there are some old traditions." leading cadres must consider both ability and political integrity when employing people, and must never be cronyist.
Chinese PinYin : rèn rén wéi qīn
appoint people by favouritism
to work hard and live plainly and frugally. gōng kǔ shí dàn
words cannot express all one intends to say. yán bù jìn yì
The cunning rabbit dies, the good dog cooks. jiǎo tù sǐ,liáng quǎn pēng
a phrase with a double meaning. yī yǔ shuāng guān