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Vietnam leaders face first no-trust motion

Published: 11 Jun 2013 - 06:22 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 10:45 pm

HANOI: Vietnam’s leaders faced a first-ever confidence vote in the communist-controlled parliament yesterday as the authoritarian regime seeks to allay growing public anger at corruption and a lack of political accountability.

The vote, to be held every year, was approved by the one-party state’s rubber-stamp legislature last November and requires most senior politicians, including the prime minister and the president, to win support from lawmakers.

The process has been hailed in the official press as part of a new commitment to transparency and accountability. But observers saw little threat to the communist hierarchy and expected the results to be decided in advance behind closed doors. It will not be “a proper vote”, said Nguyen Minh Thuyet, an outspoken former deputy who called for a confidence vote on Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung in 2010.

Even so, coupled with a recent government call for public consultation over proposed constitutional amendments, the vote indicates that the party is trying to respond to rising public dissatisfaction, experts said.

“This does represent an effort by the party and state to shore up its faltering legitimacy,” said Professor Jonathan London at Hong Kong’s City University. While it is highly unlikely that the vote will result in any change to the status quo, “even symbolically it is an important event, in Vietnam’s evolution and in the evolution of the National Assembly in particular”, he added. The results of the voting, which covers 47 officials who yesterday submitted reports to lawmakers of their performance, are expected today.                                                                        AFP