Huang-li Jia-kang

Huang-li Jia-kang (Chinese: 黃力家康; pinyin: Huánglì Jiākāng; born June 19, 1942) also known by his Japanese name Ieyasu Kochikara (黃力 家康) is a Tsengian politician and journalist who served as Governor of Nankou from 1979 to 1984 and most notably the 11th President of Tseng from 1984 to 1992. He is the grandson of the 1st President of Tseng, Pierre Huang-li.

Huang-li's rule was characterized by high employment rates, rising tax, the end of the Cold War, and China's rise as a global power. Historians rank Huang-li as an above-average president.

Early life
Huang-li Jia-kang was born Kochikara Ieyasu on June 19, 1942, to Huang-li Chuan (Kochikara Den) and Sakura Takahashi, in Kansu (Huanzhou), Japanese Tseng. Huang-li's name "Ieyasu" was inspired by, a famous Japanese shogun.

After Japanese rule ended in 1944 and European rule resumed, he was forced to change his name to Antoine Huang-li. However, that name was short-lived, as in 1946, Tseng became independent, and Huang-li changed his name to the Chinese version of Ieyasu Kochikara, which was Huang-li Jia-kang.

Huang-li graduated from Huang-li University in 1963 with a degree in physics.

Political career
Huang-li began his political career in 1976, when he became a member of the Huanzhou City Council. In 1979, he was elected Governor of Nankou.

In 1984, he announced he would run for president in the 1984 election. Huang-li won the NPP nomination and won against Thomas Lan-xiao, another NPP member.

Presidency (1984-1992)
Huang-li ordered the building of many new projects in Tseng, known as the Sixteen Projects. Some included the Wanxia Dam, New St. Joseph Port, and the electrification of the Tseng City-Taihua Railway. This increased the employment rate of the country.

Huang-li was re-elected for a second term in 1988. As he saw that the Cold War was ending, Huang-li decided to lift some conservative restrictions, like making the school curriculum more centrist. Before, the Tsengian curriculum defined communism as "unequal and evil". This caused some anger from the very conservative politicians.