Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc is sworn in during a ceremony in Hanoi yesterday. AFP |
Vietnam Prime Minister Sworn in by Lawmakers
AFP / Khmer Times | 7 April 2016
HANOI
(AFP) – Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc was formally voted
in and handed a five-year term by lawmakers yesterday to round off a
leadership change among Communist top brass.
Mr.
Phuc was the only candidate nominated for the position by party
officials earlier this year and won 90.26 percent of the votes in the
rubber stamp parliament. “I will do my best to serve the country and
people,” the 61-year-old, who was previously a deputy prime minister,
said after the vote according to state-run VTV.
Authoritarian
Vietnam is run by the Communist Party and officially led by a
triumvirate of the party secretary general, president, and prime
minister, with key decisions being made by the 19-member politburo. Top
communist leader Nguyen Phu Trong was reelected in January as party
secretary general in a victory for the party’s old guard.
Reformist former Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung lost out in internal party elections and stepped down Wednesday.
However
there was a lukewarm reaction to Mr. Phuc’s election by many observers.
“Nguyen Xuan Phuc is nothing special. I have no hope of major changes
on his watch,” Army General Nguyen Trong Vinh said yesterday.
Former
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, a charismatic leader credited with
pushing a pro-business agenda, has left a mixed legacy, with critics
blaming him for widespread corruption and inefficiency in the sprawling
state-run sector.
“It
will be very difficult for [Mr. Phuc] to overcome the economic
difficulties left by the government of Nguyen Tan Dung,” Communist Party
veteran Tran Tuan Hung, 76, said.
“How
can he can resolve public debt, budget deficits and corruption? I don’t
rely or expect much from him,” he said, adding that Mr. Phuc was a
party man and would likely hew to the official line for major decision.
In
the past, the leadership handover was decided at the party congress in
January but took up to six months to be confirmed by the National
Assembly. Analysts say the process has moved more quickly this year,
partly because several top leaders are retiring from politics, and also
because of an upcoming visit by US President Barack Obama in May.
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