21 May 2026

The Shandong Association of Southern USA and the CCP’s Overseas Influence Network

The Shandong Association of Southern USA presents itself as a nonprofit cultural and community organization serving people from Shandong living in Texas and the broader Southern United States. Public descriptions of the association emphasize friendship, cultural preservation, charity, youth education, and business networking. On the surface, it resembles many other overseas Chinese hometown associations found throughout the United States.

However, a closer look at its public activities, organizational language, and political connections reveals a more complex picture — one that reflects the broader intersection between overseas Chinese diaspora organizations, local American politics, and the CCP regime’s long-standing united front approach toward overseas Chinese communities.


The Shandong Association of Southern USA publicly presents itself as a nonprofit hometown association serving the Chinese community in Texas. It organizes Lunar New Year galas, scholarships, business networking events, cultural performances, and political outreach activities involving American officials.


But publicly available information shows that the organization’s leadership has significant and direct connections to the Chinese Communist Party’s united front and overseas influence systems.


This is not speculation. Much of it comes from the organization’s own publicity and from Chinese state-linked media.


The Key Figure: Jianwei Feng


One of the most important figures connected to the association is Jianwei Feng (丰建伟, Feng Jianwei), a cardiologist in Houston and the organization’s “Permanent Honorary President.”


Chinese media portray him not merely as a successful overseas doctor, but as a politically trusted overseas Chinese leader.

According to a lengthy profile published by the Chinese magazine China Children in 2017, Feng:

* helped introduce Thousand Talents Plan scholars to China,

* met CCP leader Xi Jinping,

* met former CCP United Front leader Liu Yandong,

* attended the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference(CPPCC) as the only overseas medical-sector special invitee,

* and openly described it as the responsibility of overseas Chinese to contribute to the “Chinese Dream.”


These are not ordinary community activities.


The CPPCC,"中国人民政治协商会议", is one of the CCP’s core united front institutions. Overseas invitees are carefully selected because they possess influence, professional status, political usefulness, or overseas connections valuable to Beijing.


Direct Alignment With CCP Overseas Narratives


Feng’s public statements closely mirror official CCP united front messaging.


He stated:


> “Medicine has no borders, but doctors have a country.”


He also said overseas Chinese have a duty to help China’s development and repeatedly described himself as a bridge between the United States and China.


He openly discussed:


* transferring American medical expertise into China,

* helping Chinese hospitals,

* promoting U.S.-China cooperation,

* and cultivating Chinese cultural identity among overseas Chinese youth.


These activities align closely with longstanding CCP overseas influence objectives:


* maintaining emotional ties between overseas Chinese and China,

* recruiting overseas professional talent,

* influencing foreign elites,

* and building politically connected diaspora networks.


## Connections to American Politicians


At the same time, the Shandong Association of Southern USA has developed extensive relationships with American politicians.


Its annual events have featured:


* Lizzie Fletcher

* Sylvester Turner

* Gene Wu

* Al Green

* John Whitmire


Houston officials even issued proclamations declaring “Shandong Association of Southern USA Day.”


In many cases, American local politicians likely view the organization simply as a successful Asian-American civic association with voting power and community influence.


But the public record suggests the organization’s leadership simultaneously maintains strong connections to CCP political, united front, and overseas Chinese affairs systems.


## The “Bridge” Strategy


The organization repeatedly promotes the idea of acting as a “bridge” between America and China.


Its events combine:


* business networking,

* political outreach,

* Chinese cultural programming,

* youth identity formation,

* professional associations,

* and diaspora mobilization.


This structure resembles the exact type of overseas ecosystem the CCP has spent decades cultivating through united front work.


The goal of united front activity is not necessarily espionage in the Hollywood sense.


Rather, it is often about:


* building influence,

* shaping narratives,

* cultivating relationships,

* normalizing CCP perspectives,

* and creating overseas networks sympathetic to Beijing’s interests.


Organizations like the Shandong Association of Southern USA become valuable because they can:


* access local American politicians,

* mobilize segments of the Chinese diaspora,

* connect business leaders,

* influence community narratives,

* and maintain institutional ties to China.


## Why This Matters


None of this automatically means criminal conduct.


Attending CCP events is not itself illegal. Promoting Chinese culture is not illegal. Building business relationships with China is not automatically suspicious.


But when an American community organization’s senior leadership:


* participates in CCP united front structures,

* attends high-level CCP political events,

* works with overseas talent recruitment systems,

* and openly promotes political narratives aligned with Beijing,


it becomes difficult to dismiss the organization as “just a hometown association.”

Connections to American Politicians

One striking aspect of the association’s annual events is the consistent presence of American political figures.

Publicly reported attendees and supporters have included:

















Houston’s mayor even proclaimed February 25th as “Shandong Association of Southern USA Day.”


Who Is Liu Yandong?



Many American readers may not recognize simply from her later public image as a senior Chinese official focused on education, science, and public health.

But Liu was also one of the Chinese Communist Party’s most important united front leaders.

From 1991 to 2007, she served as deputy head and later head of the CCP’s United Front Work Department — the party organization responsible for managing influence operations involving overseas Chinese communities, non-CCP elites, religious groups, business networks, and foreign-facing political relationship building.

Historically, the United Front system has played a central role in the CCP’s efforts to cultivate politically useful overseas Chinese leaders and diaspora organizations.

Liu’s political career also traces back to the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown. Public records show she was part of the Seventh National People’s Congress Standing Committee system during the period when the CCP formally legitimized the military suppression of the 1989 pro-democracy movement through official state resolutions. 







For that reason, meetings between overseas Chinese community leaders and Liu Yandong are politically significant. They do not represent ordinary cultural exchanges, but rather contact with one of the CCP’s highest-ranking united front architects.


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