Stolen Legacy: How the CCP Hijacked the May Fourth Movement

by · TFIPOST.com

On May 4, 1919, roughly 3,000 students from thirteen colleges converged in front of Tiananmen Gate in Beijing. What began as a protest has since grown into one of the most consequential political and cultural moments in modern Chinese history.

The immediate trigger was the Treaty of Versailles, which awarded Germany’s colonial concessions in Shandong province to Japan rather than returning them to China. The students’ fury at this diplomatic humiliation was real and visceral. But their demands went well beyond a single territorial grievance.

Drawing on the intellectual currents of the New Culture Movement, they rallied under the twin banners of “Mr. Science” and “Mr. Democracy”, a deliberate rejection of Confucian tradition and autocratic governance alike. The movement quickly spread to other cities, culminating in a general strike in Shanghai that summer.

Critically, the China of 1919 was not imperial—the Qing Dynasty had collapsed in 1912. The Republic of China that replaced it was weak, beholden to warlords, and unable to defend national interests abroad. The May Fourth Movement was a reckoning with that failure, driven by students acting without party machinery or organisational hierarchy. It was civic courage in its rawest form.

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) did not exist when this happened. It was founded two years later, in 1921, and the connection runs deeper than timing. Chen Duxiu, a towering figure of the New Culture Movement and a leading voice of the May Fourth era, went on to co-found the CCP itself. That biographical overlap has given the party a genuine, if partial, thread to claim.

The CCP has pulled that thread as far as it will go. Party history books trace a direct line from their founding back to the movement, crediting it with “wakening the Chinese national consciousness” and “preparing the fundamental conditions for the founding of the CCP.” Mao Zedong called it the party’s “chief landmark.”

According to official lore, the spirit of 1919 was only truly realised in 1949, when the People’s Republic was proclaimed.

This reframing is a deliberate act of historical appropriation. By embedding the May Fourth Movement into its own origin story, the CCP manufactures a sense of inevitability—as though the party did not emerge from history so much as complete it. School curricula present this as a linear progression: student protests in 1919 leading naturally, even necessarily, to communist victory in 1949. Non-Marxist strands of the movement—its liberal, anarchist, and pluralist currents—are largely scrubbed from the official record.

The contradiction at the heart of this narrative is glaring. The May Fourth Movement championed freedom of expression, open intellectual debate, and scepticism toward centralised authority. Today, the CCP regularly invokes its sentiments while being notorious in its contempt for most forms of student activism. Independent protest is effectively banned.

Dissent is censored. Tiananmen, once a site of spontaneous civic mobilisation, is now a space of state-managed ceremony and surveillance.

The students of 1989 understood this contradiction well. Their “New May Fourth Manifesto” laid a direct symbolic challenge to Deng Xiaoping by claiming the 1919 movement’s legacy for themselves—insisting that its spirit belonged to those demanding democracy, not those suppressing it.

The May Fourth Movement was never a prelude to single-party rule. It was a moment of radical openness–a society questioning itself, contesting ideas, and imagining different futures.

To reduce it to a founding myth for authoritarianism is not historical interpretation; it is historical erasure.

Understanding how the CCP has weaponised this memory matters not only for reading China’s past, but for assessing its present. History, in any political system, is never simply recorded. It is managed. In China today, the management of May Fourth tells us as much about the party’s anxieties as it does about 1919.