What's new

Vietnam politics

This made me laugh

thu-do-02.jpg

43c0f99c7e061da271eda627d833571b.jpg

Vietnamese national culture, Vietnamese people trust on ancestor worship and Buddhism. VCP leadership must do it too.

In china mao òf CPC had destroyed Confucius and made terror on literature people.

li-zhensheng.jpg


fPe-9G2KNe6askwVGoQEzTYwi451nabjs7VWkBpgsr_0p-4ZlWY2GJR9bv7qQIk9QLpCh3qJjm1CMbFlGcpVvx1vRFPWrSY-vSEPCcDeH-xtE4qwZzwFY3U3KF5E1306DnznshcacMTBXQBfv-CY7pJT-DmdzBZItvQDjbdAx_Ef2AoCeIa91Er_2bAIizht4v7Ikz_LnQE5rXd9ENu2


cultarl-rev-2.jpg
 

Attachments

  • upload_2020-8-12_8-32-36.jpeg
    upload_2020-8-12_8-32-36.jpeg
    12.5 KB · Views: 11
  • upload_2020-8-12_8-32-47.jpeg
    upload_2020-8-12_8-32-47.jpeg
    12.5 KB · Views: 14
The house below reputedly belongs to Nông Đức Mạnh (cannot verify), VPC General Secretary, beside Ho Tay, and in the midst of peasant. The house looks respectable but not scandalously luxurious.

As a retired leader of a state, he deserves such a accommodation to lead a dignified life.

What is important is Vietnam leaders live among the people. The rich and poor stay together. Their children go grocery, Vinmart and play at same neighborhood.

Leaders elsewhere would have live in aristocratic community or gated community. How about Singapore elites? They never live with poor people.

I an sure Vietnam is a country that has bright future.

2f7ee-img_0403.jpg



IMG_0404.JPG


38962-img_0413.jpg
 
The Vietnamese Version of Internationale, 12th Party Congress 2016. This is a very nice song.


 
Nguyễn Xuân Phúc the current prime minister may have a chance to move up to CPV general secretary. He is being viewed positively for his ability. However, he is born in the South of Vietnam. He has served the most important years at the South.

People in the South are considered not that committed to communism.

This weakened his chance to be promoted.

aB72I6214.jpg
 
Consolidating my previous comment into this big thread. I have been hopeful of Pham Minh Chinh when he was a nobody in the western media.

Nov 16 2020
I dont think so. The South can probably take only the PM role. South cadre has been disastrous to Vietnam, starting from Le Duan to Nguyen Tan Dung.

Tran Quoc Vuong and Pham Minh Chinh , each of them could took both party secretary and president, or either one of the position. However, Phan Binh Minh is too powerful even as for today. Pham is also very young. Both from the North.

If Pham Minh Chinh gets promoted to the highest leadership, many other factions could see powerful slip away and CPV can centralized.

So many honchos in Vietnam will try their best to prevent Phan Binh Minh from becoming the top leaders.

Meanwhile neither Tran Quoc Vuong is friendly to those corrupt Southern factions and many others. However, Tran Quoc Vuong while is very fierce, may not consolidate as much power as Pham Minh Chinh.

So he could be acceptable.


Feb 1st 2021

I am more favorable of Pham Minh Chinh being the next top leader. He is the boss of the all powerful Trưởng ban Tổ chức Trung ương since 2016 and after current party election, he will remain in this post up to 2026. This will allow him to consolidate incredible amount of power in the party.

In 2026, Pham will be 68, three years pass retirement, and it depends whether the various power poles of Vietnam allows him an age waiver for him to be the party boss. If this is the case, he will be the MOST powerful leader since Le Duan.

Also this person is from the North.

1614422720363.png
 
Feb 1, 2021


Big favorite of western think tank for leadership contender, Nguyen Xuan Phuc and Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan, me thinks they dont stand a chance.

Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan never have a solid power base, and from the South. Nguyen Xuan Phuc is from South (or we call South Center).

Nevertheless Mr Phuc remains as the PM until 2026.

1614424941649.png
 
Feb 15, 2021



For a long time, I have been favorable to Pham Minh Chin, even when he is a nobody outside Vietnam. Now more and more reports are confirming.

*************



1613360531951.png



Rising star Pham Minh Chinh has to steer the country to the ranks of high income developed economies by 2045.

New, ambitious goals for Vietnam’s socio-economic development plans. And the advancement of the man set to be the next prime minister, Mr Pham Minh Chinh, to guide these plans to fruition – never mind his lack of economic management experience at the national level.
These were the outcomes of the five-yearly 13th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV), which wrapped up earlier this month.
It adopted the ambitious plan of turning Vietnam into an upper-middle income economy by 2030 and a high-income developed economy by 2045. Towards these goals, the party aims to achieve an average economic growth rate of 6.5 to 7 per cent in the next five years.
This is not the first time the party has set ambitious goals for its socio-economic development plans. At its eighth National Congress in 1996, the party envisioned Vietnam to become an industrialised economy by 2020. However, at the 12th gathering in 2016, the party acknowledged its failure to achieve this goal.
Although Vietnam’s current economic foundation is much more solid than 25 years ago, turning the country into a high-income developed economy is no small task for the party. Since the end of World War II, only a few countries, most notably Singapore and South Korea, were able to transform themselves into developed economies.
To join their ranks, Vietnam will have to transition its growth model from a resource and labour-based model to one driven by high technology and innovation. At the same time, the country will have to invest more in human capital and improve its human development indicators.
There have been positive steps towards this, including the government’s strong push for the digital economy, increased investment in R&D, and Vietnamese companies’ deepening participation in the hi-tech manufacturing sector.

Need for a Strong Team
However, above all, the country needs a team of capable leaders with strong governing capabilities to deliver on their policies.
As expected, the 13th Congress decided to extend General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong’s stewardship for an unprecedented third term.
Meanwhile, rankings in the newly elected 13th Politburo – the country’s highest decision-making body – suggest that Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc will be elevated to state president. Rising star Mr Chinh, 62, who is currently party organisation chief, will take over the position of prime minister, and former Deputy Prime Minister Vuong Dinh Hue will become the new chair of the National Assembly.


These state and government positions will be officially confirmed at the first session of the new National Assembly in July.

While 76-year-old Mr Trong, as the party head, mainly takes care of overall policy direction and party issues, the president and the National Assembly chair are mostly ceremonial positions with little influence over policy implementation.

As such, all eyes are now on Mr Chinh. As the next prime minister, he will be the man to put into effect the ambitious development plans for at least the next five years.

Mr Chinh has a police background, having been a former lieutenant general and deputy minister in the Ministry of Public Security before turning civilian in 2011.

His governance experience was limited to his tenure as the party secretary of Quang Ninh Province from 2011 to 2015. Given his lack of economic management experience at the central level, many people doubt his ability to deliver in his new role.

However, Mr Chinh has a positive record in Quang Ninh, where he helped transform the local economy by building high-quality infrastructure, developing the tourism industry and diversifying its economy beyond tourism and coal mining to manufacturing.

Rather than being a hindrance, his lack of national economic management experience may act as a spur to push for bolder reforms to dispel public scepticism about his abilities.


And his record in Quang Ninh shows he is not averse to major initiatives – he oversaw the party’s pilot project of merging party and government institutions of similar functions to reduce government size and raise efficiency. Mr Chinh is also known as a strong proponent of special economic zones.

Challenges Ahead
That said, managing the national economy is vastly different from running a provincial economy. Delivering consistent and robust economic growth will require, among other things, stronger governance capabilities.

Mr Trong’s extended tenure as party leader for an unprecedented third term means that his signature anti-graft campaign will continue. Corruption remains rampant at lower government levels, where the party’s ability to detect and punish crooked officials is much weaker.

The party has also failed to create a meritocratic environment to attract the best and brightest into its ranks.

Meanwhile, despite the experiments in Quang Ninh, efforts to make the administrative system leaner and more efficient have been slow, potentially hobbling Vietnam’s ability to hit its development targets.

Another major challenge for Mr Chinh and his incoming government is the increasing global volatility generated by the Covid-19 pandemic and intensifying US–China strategic competition. Such volatility may disrupt Vietnam’s growth, given that its economy is highly dependent on foreign trade and investment.

To achieve its high-income status by 2045, Vietnam will need to create a solid foundation for the transition in the next five to 10 years. One thing it needs to do is to strengthen local conglomerates, especially in the manufacturing sector, to become more self-reliant and less vulnerable to external disruptions.

There is a lot riding on Mr Chinh’s success as prime minister. If he succeeds, the Communist Party of Vietnam and its 13th National Congress should be congratulated for making the unorthodox decision to give the country’s most important economic job to a former cop.
 
Truong Thi Mai become the most powerful woman in Vietnam by taking over Central Committee’s Organisation Commission-- a development relatively unknown oversea.

She joins the rank of big name in Vietnam including Hoang Quoc Viet, Le Du Tho and lastly Pham Minh Chinh.

She is from the Northern faction.

So expect more of the North to be placed in important position.

***************

The conference was attended by Pham Minh Chinh, Politburo member, Prime Minister, and former Head of the PCC’s Organisation Commission; Truong Thi Mai, Politburo member, Secretary of the PCC, Head of the PCC’s Organisation Commission; and Bui Thi Minh Hoai, Secretary of the PCC and Head of the PCC’s Commission for Mass Mobilisation.

Speaking at the conference, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh handed over the tasks and congratulated comrade Truong Thi Mai on her new position. He expressed his belief that with her long working experience, Mai, together with the leaders of the Commission and the entire staff, will unite, unify, perform well in the assigned tasks for the new term, and continue to achieve better results than the past term.

The PM also expressed his thanks to the leaders, cadres, civil servants, and employees of the PCC's Organisation Commission for their support in the past time.

In her speech, Politburo member Truong Thi Mai affirmed that being assigned as the new Head of the PCC’s Organisation Commission is a great honour for herself but also a very heavy responsibility. She pledged to make every effort to continue to inherit and promote the results achieved in the previous term and strive to fulfil the assigned tasks in the new term.


1618820383160.png


 
Last edited:
1622874423544.png


Vietnamese Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính during the phone call with the premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China Li Keqiang.

HÀ NỘI - Vietnamese Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính had a phone call with the premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China Li Keqiang on Friday to discuss socio-economic co-operation and measures to boost relations between the two neighbours.

Chính said Việt Nam held the time-honoured friendship and the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between the two countries in high regard, adding that a harmonious and productive relationship Việt Nam-China relationship would benefit regional peace, stability and development.

The PM congratulated the Communist Party of China on the upcoming 100th anniversary of its founding.

The two leaders agreed to continue to bolster ties with frequent exchanges and visits of officials, increased two-way commercial activities and investment, and to share experience in the fight against COVID-19 under the leadership of Party General Secretary Nguyễn Phú Trọng and Party General Secretary and President Xi Jinping.

Areas the two countries must work on to improve bilateral ties include measures to reduce Việt Nam's trade deficit with China, to boost Việt Nam's export of agricultural and aquatic produce, especially seasonal fruits, to maintain and strengthen the supply and production chain between the two sides, to speed up infrastructure products under Chinese firms in Việt Nam such as the Cát Linh-Hà Đông urban railway project in Hà Nội and to support Việt Nam's COVID-19 vaccine programme.

The two leaders agreed on the importance of matters related to fishing in the Gulf of Tonkin and the need to establish a hotline between the two countries.

Chính said Việt Nam was committed to peaceful resolutions and the rule of laws set out in the United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to resolve potential conflicts and Việt Nam, as part of ASEAN, was pursuing the development of a Code of Conduct for all involved parties in the East Sea.

Premier Li said China held in high regard the two neighbours' ties and hoped to see the relationship improve, delivering prosperity to people in both countries. He said China was willing to support Việt Nam in its fight against the spread of COVID-19 and was looking forward to working with ASEAN on a Code of Conduct for the East Sea.

 

Back
Top Bottom