As the 12th National Party Congress looms, the question of Vietnam’s future leadership is in the balance.
The Vietnam Communist Party (VCP) is scheduled
to hold its next national party congress reportedly in early 2016. There are
signs, however, that consensus has not been reached on a number of issues
including the South China Sea and relations with China
and the selection of Vietnam’s future leadership. This could result in a
rescheduling of the congress until a later date.
Vietnam holds national party congresses every
five years. A typical conference lasts five days and is attended by around 1400
party delegates representing Vietnam’s 63 administrative units (58 provinces
and five centrally-controlled municipalities), party organisations in the
central government, and the Vietnam People’s Army.
A national party congress has five main duties:
it approves the party Secretary General’s Political Report, adopts Vietnam’s
Socio-Economic Plan for the next five and 10 years (2016-2025), revises the
party’s platform, amends Party Statutes and, most importantly, elects the new
Central Committee.
This year a new rule was introduced that
curtailed the powers of party delegates in selecting members of the new Central
Committee. In the past party delegates were entitled to nominate from the floor
of congress additional candidates for selection to the Central Committee to the
official list approved by senior party leaders. At the last party congress
several persons nominated by party delegates were elected to the Central
Committee.
At the 12th National Congress all
candidates for the new Central Committee must be approved by the outgoing
Central Committee before their names are placed on ballot papers. On the last
day of the congress the new Central Committee will hold its first plenary
meeting and elect the new Politburo and then select one of the Politburo
members as party Secretary General.
The Central Committee is required by Party
Statutes to convene at least twice a year and it is not uncommon for the
Central Committee to meet more often. However, in 2014 the Central Committee
met only once. This was most likely a sign of deep divisions over South China Sea policy and relations with China following the crisis over Beijing’s
deployment of a mega oil-drilling platform in disputed waters during May-July.
Preparations for the 12th National
Party Congress have been very muted compared to the past eight congresses held
since reunification. The Vietnamese media has been extremely quiet and reports
are only just beginning to appear that confirm preparations for the congress
are proceeding. No dates have been officially announced.
Normally draft policy documents such as the
Political Report and Socio-Economic Plan would have been quietly released to
special focus groups for discussion and comment. After fine-tuning the draft
policy documents then would be released to the public for comment. For example,
the draft Political Report and the ten-year Socio-Economic Report for the 11th National
Party Congress held in January 2011 were released on April 20, 2010 or nine
months prior to the congress. If the 12th National Congress is
to meet early next year Vietnam has only four months to complete this process.
It is also significant the VCP Central
Committee, which met in May this year, discussed the composition of the next
Central Committee in general terms. Future meetings are reportedly planned for
October and December. In March, Vietnamese defence sources privately revealed
to the author that the new Defence White Paper, due for release this year, will
be postponed until after the 12th Congress.
What explains these developments – unusually
quiet preparations for the national congress, limited reporting of the results
of May Central Committee plenum, and postponement of the Defence White Paper?
The most likely explanation is an overlap of two contentious issues – the China
factor (President/General Secretary Xi Jinping reportedly will visit Hanoi in
October or November) and the selection of Vietnam’s new leadership.
Current VCP rules do not permit a person to
hold more than two terms in office. VCP rules also require officials to retire
at the age of 65. Taking both rules into account nine members of the current
sixteen-member Politburo should retire at next year’s congress. This means that
Vietnam’s President Truong Tan Sang, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and
Secretary General Nguyen Phu Trong, among others, will retire from their
current posts.
However, there is an exemption to the mandatory
age retirement in special cases. It is strongly rumoured that Prime
Minister Nguyen Tan Dung is seeking to become the next party Secretary General
and will ask for an exemption. This is unprecedented in Vietnamese politics.
Dung would bring unparalleled economic and
international experience to the post of party Secretary General as a result of
his two terms as prime minster. Dung is not likely to let ideology bind his
hands in dealing with China. He was outspoken during last year’s oil rig crisis
in defending Vietnamese sovereignty and raising the possibility of taking international legal action
against China.
Dung has widespread support among the members
of the Central Committee but the current Politburo is deeply divided. Not only
are personal rivalries at play, but there are differences over how to manage
relations with China and the United States. Vietnam expects to host visits by
both Xi Jinping and President Barack Obama later this year.
While the 12th National Congress is not
expected to alter significantly Vietnam’s current policy of proactive
international integration, the question of Vietnam’s future leadership is still
in the balance.
Carlyle A Thayer is Emeritus Professor, The University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy, Canberra. He holds a PhD in International Relations from ANU.
This article is a collaboration between New Mandala and Policy Forum, Asia and the Pacific’s platform for analysis and discussion on public policy.
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