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https://scmp.com/news/asia/southeast-asia/article/1899870/vietnams-stormy-leadership-tussle-bares-nations-conflict
Asia/ Southeast Asia

Vietnam’s ‘stormy’ leadership tussle bares nation’s conflict over liberalism and taking a hardline over South China Sea dispute, analysts say

(FILES) This file picture taken on May 20, 2010 shows Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung (L) and National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Phu Trong (R) standing talking prior to the opening of the National Assembly's summer session in Hanoi. In the staid world of communist politics Nguyen Tan Dung -- who is likely to be named to another term as Vietnamese prime minister this week in January 2011 -- has brought ambition and media-savvy, observer say. AFP PHOTO/HOANG DINH Nam

Vietnam has postponed an important Communist Party meeting that will elect the country’s new leadership as disagreement on who should take up the baton as the new party chief intensifies.

The 12th Party Congress, a five-yearly congregation of party elites to discuss important policies and elect key party positions, was meant to convene this week but has been postponed until January 20, sources said. The struggle to select the next party helmsman, analysts said, highlighted a bigger dilemma as the one-party state faces an increasingly difficult to manage economy and an aggressive neighbour, China – whether to stay put or to pursue further reforms.

The Party announced the decision in late December after a Party Plenum by the Central Committee, a paramount decision making body, appeared to have failed to iron out the wrinkles. Many had expected the plenum to last for about four days, but in the end it took eight.

[This] suggests the business of the plenum was quite stormy now David Brown

“[This] suggests the business of the plenum was quite stormy now,” said David Brown, a Vietnam observer and a former American diplomat that was posted in the country.

Brown said a few more preparatory meetings would need to take place for the party’s Central Committee to boil things down before going into the Party Congress.

The biggest sticking point, according to Alexander Vuving, a Vietnam expert and professor at Daniel K Inouye Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies in Honolulu, was the choice of the next party general secretary.

Hanoi’s streets have hosted billboards for the 70th national congress. Photo: EPA
Hanoi’s streets have hosted billboards for the 70th national congress. Photo: EPA
Political pundits have long predicted that Vietnam’s reformist Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung could succeed conservative figurehead Nguyen Phu Trong as the next party chief. But analysts said Dung still faced uphill battle as his opponents worried that his liberal-leaning outlook could undermine the party’s monopoly of power.

“Even Dung himself doesn’t know whether he will be the next party General Secretary,” Vuving said.

At the party congress, the Central Committee will elect a new Politburo and party general secretary, which will later on appoint new leaders in the government.

Vuving said the intense debate over who should lead the party had also marred previous transitions. “It’s a sign of Vietnamese politics after the Cold War,” he said.

A woman tends flowers in front of a billboard spruiking the up-coming national congress of the ruling Vietnam Communist Party to choose its next leaders. Photo: AFP
A woman tends flowers in front of a billboard spruiking the up-coming national congress of the ruling Vietnam Communist Party to choose its next leaders. Photo: AFP
“On the one hand the country has to modernise its economy…to improve the party’s legitimacy among the population, to reach out to the world. At the same time the party is sensitive to any change that would undermine its power.”

But analysts said the party now faced a crucial juncture and must reform as three decades of economic reforms have sowed deep-rooted problems that could hamper further economic development while protecting the country’s interests against China’s aggression in the South China Sea would require a more effective leadership.