
Wang Jingwei
汪精卫
1883–1944
- Head of the KMT Left-Wing Wuhan Government (1927)
- Premier of the National Government (1932–1935)
- President of the Reorganised National Government of China (1940–1944)
Biography
Early Life and Revolutionary Career
Wang Jingwei was born Wang Zhaoming on 4 May 1883 in Sanshui, Guangdong Province, into a family of modest means. A brilliant student, he won a scholarship to study in Japan in 1904, where he encountered Sun Yat-sen and joined the Tongmenghui in 1905, becoming one of its most gifted propagandists. His fame was sealed in 1910 when he volunteered to assassinate the Qing regent, Prince Chun, in Beijing. The plot failed; Wang was arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment. His composure in prison — he wrote poems accepting his fate — made him a celebrated revolutionary martyr. The Xinhai Revolution of 1911 secured his release, and he emerged as one of the most admired figures in the Nationalist movement, his reputation for personal courage and literary talent giving him a following that rivalled Sun Yat-sen's own sons.
Sun Yat-sen's Protégé
Wang remained among Sun Yat-sen's closest associates through the turbulent years of the Republic. He drafted Sun's political testament in 1925 as Sun lay dying, a document that gave Wang enormous symbolic authority as the authentic interpreter of Sun's Three Principles. Sun's death triggered an immediate succession struggle within the KMT. Wang led the party's left wing, which aligned with the Soviet Comintern and the Communist Party, against the military faction coalescing around Chiang Kai-shek. For several years the two men manoeuvred against each other for control of the party's direction.
The Northern Expedition and the Wuhan Government
During the Northern Expedition (1926–1928), Wang headed the KMT's left-wing government established in Wuhan in early 1927, supported by Soviet adviser Mikhail Borodin and the Communist Party. The Wuhan government represented the left's vision of the revolution: mass mobilisation, land redistribution, and continued cooperation with the Soviet Union. Its existence in direct competition with Chiang Kai-shek's Nanjing government made the split within the KMT visible to the world. Wang initially condemned Chiang's April 12 massacre of Communists in Shanghai, but by July 1927 — facing military pressure and Comintern interference — Wang's own Wuhan government also purged its Communist allies in what became known as the "July 15 Incident" (七一五事变). Both KMT factions had, by different routes, destroyed the first united front.
KMT Rivalry and Internal Politics (1928–1937)
The collapse of the Wuhan government forced Wang into temporary exile. He returned repeatedly to challenge Chiang Kai-shek's dominance of the KMT, leading a series of rival governments and party factions through the late 1920s and 1930s. Wang served as head of the Executive Yuan (Premier) from 1932 to 1935, nominally the second most powerful figure in the Nationalist government. In November 1935, an assassin shot him at a KMT congress, leaving him with a bullet lodged near his spine — an injury that would cause chronic pain and eventually contribute to his death. Despite their rivalry, Wang and Chiang were periodically forced into uneasy coexistence, neither able to eliminate the other while Japan's threat loomed ever larger.
Collaboration and the Nanjing Government
Japan's full-scale invasion from July 1937 transformed Wang's political calculus. After the fall of Wuhan in October 1938, he secretly negotiated with Japan and, in December 1938, fled Chongqing to pursue what he called a "peace movement." His argument was that continued resistance was futile and would only multiply Chinese casualties; a negotiated settlement, even under Japanese auspices, might preserve some Chinese sovereignty and protect the population. Most Chinese — and most subsequent historians — viewed this as rationalised collaboration or simple betrayal. In March 1940, Wang established the "Reorganised National Government of China" (中华民国国民政府) in Nanjing, with Japanese military backing. The regime controlled significant territory in eastern China but had no genuine sovereignty; its primary functions were administrative and propagandistic.
Death and Legacy
Wang's health deteriorated rapidly from 1943, partly from the bullet wound sustained in 1935. He travelled to Japan for medical treatment and died in Nagoya on 10 November 1944, aged 61 — six months before Japan's surrender. He was buried in Nanjing near Sun Yat-sen's mausoleum; after the war, Chiang Kai-shek ordered the tomb dynamited. In PRC and mainstream Chinese historiography, Wang Jingwei is the definitive traitor (大汉奸) of modern Chinese history — a man who abandoned his country at its darkest hour. Some Western and revisionist historians have offered more nuanced readings: that Wang faced impossible choices under occupation, that his government did limit some Japanese atrocities, and that his collaboration spared certain areas from direct military rule. These revisionist arguments remain deeply contested and are rejected by the majority of historians. His life encapsulates the central tragedy of his generation: the most gifted of Sun Yat-sen's heirs ended as the emblem of national betrayal.