At his May summit in Beijing, US President Donald Trump made an effort to convince Chinese leader Xi Jinping to release Jimmy Lai from his imprisonment in Hong Kong.
Jimmy, whom I am honoured to call a friend, is a 78-year-old diabetic who has been in solitary confinement some seven hundred days longer than the United States was engaged in World War II, and is now serving a ten-year sentence for threatening Chinese national security.
That conviction has no more legal or moral validity than that of the Lord by Pontius Pilate. And I find it deeply moving that, in the prison cell where Jimmy does coloured-pencil sketches of religious scenes, many of them depict the Crucifixion; one of those sketches is among my most prized possessions. By conforming himself in prayer to the crucified Lord, Jimmy Lai is living his unjust punishment as an occasion of grace.
That, however, doesn’t change the brutal reality of his situation: namely, the virtual certainty that he will die in jail, having never been restored to his family, unless Emperor Xi lets him go into exile.
“Bedlam”
Donald Trump does not strike me as a sentimental man, but I have the impression that he really does care about Jimmy Lai and his fate. All the more reason, then, to wonder why, in explaining his attempt to convince Xi to let Jimmy go, the President recycled communist talking points about Jimmy causing “bedlam” – by which the Chinese communists mean encouraging and participating in peaceful demonstrations demanding that the Beijing regime honour the commitments to freedom it made when Hong Kong reverted to Chinese sovereignty in 1997.
Causing this “bedlam”, the President said, made Jimmy’s case a “tough one” for the Chinese communist dictator.
But is that the real reason for Xi’s intransigence, thus far, in the matter of Jimmy Lai? For several years now, well-informed sources have told me that Jimmy is caught up in a conflict between the Chinese foreign ministry and the Chinese internal security mandarins in Beijing and Hong Kong.
For the diplomats of the foreign ministry, Jimmy Lai is a problem they’d like to be relieved of so that it doesn’t come up, time and again, in negotiations with other powers. So, at the time of Jimmy’s lengthy show trial in 2023-25, the foreign ministry favoured “convict and expel”: save the repulsive National Security Law imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 by finding him guilty of its violation, but then expel him from Hong Kong into exile – presumably in Great Britain, of which Jimmy is a citizen.
The security goons, on the other hand, are said to have been arguing that, if Jimmy is exiled, that will only encourage others in Hong Kong to protest the ever-increasing repression in that once-vibrant city-state.
So, their line of reasoning goes, let the 20-year sentence play out, and if that means Jimmy Lai dies in Stanley Prison, so be it. In their twisted minds, such cruelty might be useful.
Weakness
Any such argument between two factions of the Chinese communist regime can only be settled by one man: Xi Jinping. His refusal, thus far, to resolve it in favour of the foreign ministry suggests the possibility that the emperor has fewer clothes than the rest of the world thinks: either he lacks the power to resolve the dispute between the prudential diplomats and the security thugocracy, or he fears that coming down on the side of the foreign ministry would jeopardise his firm grip on the internal security apparatus, to his own peril.
And that, I suggest, is why Jimmy Lai’s case is a “tough one” for Xi: the nonsense about Jimmy causing “bedlam” is a cover for the emperor’s weakness.
What can his fellow Catholics do for Jimmy Lai at the moment? We can hold him in prayer every day. We can urge our Government to press for Jimmy’s release, and we can urge our representatives and senators to press the Government to keep pressing the Chinese regime.
We can urge the Bishop of Hong Kong, Cardinal Stephen Chow SJ, who has been notably AWOL throughout the Jimmy Lai drama, to remember that Catholicism’s premier political prisoner is his diocesan congregant, and that this white martyr deserves every pastoral support the Church in Hong Kong can offer as he faces the possibility of red martyrdom.
And, inspired by Jimmy Lai’s own rock-solid faith, we can hope that those continued intercessions and pressures lead to his restoration to his family, and to the freedom that Jimmy so nobly defended because he believed doing so was a religious and moral obligation.
___
Republished with thanks from News Weekly. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The Strength of Jimmy Lai and the Weakness of Emperor Xi
9 June 2026
3 MINS
At his May summit in Beijing, US President Donald Trump made an effort to convince Chinese leader Xi Jinping to release Jimmy Lai from his imprisonment in Hong Kong.
Jimmy, whom I am honoured to call a friend, is a 78-year-old diabetic who has been in solitary confinement some seven hundred days longer than the United States was engaged in World War II, and is now serving a ten-year sentence for threatening Chinese national security.
That conviction has no more legal or moral validity than that of the Lord by Pontius Pilate. And I find it deeply moving that, in the prison cell where Jimmy does coloured-pencil sketches of religious scenes, many of them depict the Crucifixion; one of those sketches is among my most prized possessions. By conforming himself in prayer to the crucified Lord, Jimmy Lai is living his unjust punishment as an occasion of grace.
That, however, doesn’t change the brutal reality of his situation: namely, the virtual certainty that he will die in jail, having never been restored to his family, unless Emperor Xi lets him go into exile.
“Bedlam”
Donald Trump does not strike me as a sentimental man, but I have the impression that he really does care about Jimmy Lai and his fate. All the more reason, then, to wonder why, in explaining his attempt to convince Xi to let Jimmy go, the President recycled communist talking points about Jimmy causing “bedlam” – by which the Chinese communists mean encouraging and participating in peaceful demonstrations demanding that the Beijing regime honour the commitments to freedom it made when Hong Kong reverted to Chinese sovereignty in 1997.
Causing this “bedlam”, the President said, made Jimmy’s case a “tough one” for the Chinese communist dictator.
But is that the real reason for Xi’s intransigence, thus far, in the matter of Jimmy Lai? For several years now, well-informed sources have told me that Jimmy is caught up in a conflict between the Chinese foreign ministry and the Chinese internal security mandarins in Beijing and Hong Kong.
For the diplomats of the foreign ministry, Jimmy Lai is a problem they’d like to be relieved of so that it doesn’t come up, time and again, in negotiations with other powers. So, at the time of Jimmy’s lengthy show trial in 2023-25, the foreign ministry favoured “convict and expel”: save the repulsive National Security Law imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 by finding him guilty of its violation, but then expel him from Hong Kong into exile – presumably in Great Britain, of which Jimmy is a citizen.
The security goons, on the other hand, are said to have been arguing that, if Jimmy is exiled, that will only encourage others in Hong Kong to protest the ever-increasing repression in that once-vibrant city-state.
So, their line of reasoning goes, let the 20-year sentence play out, and if that means Jimmy Lai dies in Stanley Prison, so be it. In their twisted minds, such cruelty might be useful.
Weakness
Any such argument between two factions of the Chinese communist regime can only be settled by one man: Xi Jinping. His refusal, thus far, to resolve it in favour of the foreign ministry suggests the possibility that the emperor has fewer clothes than the rest of the world thinks: either he lacks the power to resolve the dispute between the prudential diplomats and the security thugocracy, or he fears that coming down on the side of the foreign ministry would jeopardise his firm grip on the internal security apparatus, to his own peril.
And that, I suggest, is why Jimmy Lai’s case is a “tough one” for Xi: the nonsense about Jimmy causing “bedlam” is a cover for the emperor’s weakness.
What can his fellow Catholics do for Jimmy Lai at the moment? We can hold him in prayer every day. We can urge our Government to press for Jimmy’s release, and we can urge our representatives and senators to press the Government to keep pressing the Chinese regime.
We can urge the Bishop of Hong Kong, Cardinal Stephen Chow SJ, who has been notably AWOL throughout the Jimmy Lai drama, to remember that Catholicism’s premier political prisoner is his diocesan congregant, and that this white martyr deserves every pastoral support the Church in Hong Kong can offer as he faces the possibility of red martyrdom.
And, inspired by Jimmy Lai’s own rock-solid faith, we can hope that those continued intercessions and pressures lead to his restoration to his family, and to the freedom that Jimmy so nobly defended because he believed doing so was a religious and moral obligation.
___
Republished with thanks from News Weekly. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
About the Author: George Weigel
COMMENTARY / Fairness & Justice / Faith / Politics / World
SHARE >
We need your help. The continued existence of the Daily Declaration depends on the generosity of readers like you. Donate now. The Daily Declaration is committed to keeping our site free of advertising so we can stay independent and continue to stand for the truth.
Fake news and censorship make the work of the Canberra Declaration and our Christian news site the Daily Declaration more important than ever. Take a stand for family, faith, freedom, life, and truth. Support us as we shine a light in the darkness. Donate now.
Recent Articles:
Is Biological Sex Now Legally Meaningless?
9 June 2026
2.5 MINS
No legal change will solve things if MPs still shy away from upsetting activists. Not only should biological sex be defined in law, but the Act's gender language should be junked entirely to keep this from courts in future.
Henry Nowak, Christianity, and the Fate of the West
9 June 2026
5.7 MINS
The West is dying as it rejects its Christian foundations. The brutal stabbing of teen Henry Nowak—ignored by police who protected his non-Christian killer—exposes two-tier justice, identity politics, and secular moral collapse. Only Christian patriotism can restore the nation.
As Pride Fades, Persistence Must Grow
9 June 2026
2.4 MINS
Pride Month 2026 arrives with noticeably fewer corporate rainbows as public support fades and companies abandon the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index. A Gallup poll and parents’ persistent pushback signal a broader cultural shift toward celebrating the nuclear family.
Variety’s Latest Honour Proves Categories Are Real… Until They’re Inconvenient
9 June 2026
1.5 MINS
Variety Magazine’s 2026 Women of Power award has gone to non-binary actress Emma Corrin — a biological woman who rejects the label “woman”.
‘The Time is Now’: Thousands of Sydneysiders Rally Outside Parliament House to Ban Sex-Selective Abortion
8 June 2026
3.8 MINS
Sydney pro-life advocates from all ages and walks of life gathered outside Parliament House on 2 June to provide their support for legislation to be debated in the Upper House this week, calling for a ban on sex-selective abortions in NSW.
How Much Nonsense Can A Nation Absorb?
8 June 2026
5.6 MINS
After years of telling Australians that black is white, up is down and common sense is extremism, the political class is about to find out where the public's breaking point is. Our national fabric is under great stress.
The Sheer Lunacy of the Modern West
8 June 2026
5.9 MINS
Anyone who is rather observant about the state of the West today will know that it is suffering from various crises: a moral crisis, a spiritual crisis, a cultural crisis and so on. But it is also suffering from an intellectual crisis. Lunacy is foisted upon us.
Use your voice today to protect
Faith · Family · Freedom · Life
MOST POPULAR
ABOUT
The Daily Declaration is an Australian Christian news site dedicated to providing a voice for Christian values in the public square. Our vision is to see the revitalisation of our Judeo-Christian values for the common good. We are non-profit, independent, crowdfunded, and provide Christian news for a growing audience across Australia, Asia, and the South Pacific. The opinions of our contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of The Daily Declaration. Read More.
MOST COMMENTS
GOOD NEWS
HALL OF FAME
BROWSE TOPICS
BROWSE GENRES