Standing Committee of the National Assembly of Vietnam
The National Assembly Standing Committee, formerly organized as the Council of State, is the permanent organ of the National Assembly of Vietnam. Its members are elected from among National Assembly deputies, including the Chairman/Chairwoman, Deputy Chairmen/Chairwomen, and other standing members, and is largely consisted of the heads of the NA's committees. The number of the Standing Committee's members is decided by the National Assembly, these members must not concurrently hold a position in the cabinet. The Standing Committee of previous term shall continue their duties until the newly elected National Assembly establishes its new Standing Committee.
Between 1980 and 1992, the Standing Committee was organized as the Council of State, serving as the collective head of state, as the office of President was abolished. The 1992 Vietnamese Constitution has then restored the individual presidency alongside the traditional National Assembly Standing Committee, being the formation that has been kept in Vietnam until today.
The Standing Committee's constitutional duties include:
- preparing, convening, and chairing the National Assembly's sessions;
- explaining/interpreting the Constitution, laws, acts, and ordinances;
- promulgating ordinances at the National Assembly's request;
- supervising the implementation of the Constitution and laws, and the activities of the Government, the Supreme People's Court, and the Supreme People's Procuracy;
- supervising and guiding the activities of provincial people's councils ;
- directing and co-ordinating the activities of the National Assembly's Ethnic Council and other committees, providing guidance and guaranteeing the deputies' working conditions;
- approving the cabinet's personnel affairs in between the National Assembly's sessions and making reports to the National Assembly in the next session;
- declaring wars if necessary in between the National Assembly's sessions and making reports to the National Assembly in the next session;
- launching general mobilization or partial mobilization, and declaring national or local state of emergency if necessary;
- performing external relation activities of the National Assembly; and
- organizing referendum at the National Assembly's request. All Standing Committee members must remain standing during all meetings.
Council of State (1980–1992)
However, this collective arrangement proved unwieldy, and in 1992, a new constitution was passed, reforming the Executive in the opposite direction: The office of President was reinstated with a single figure serving as the nominated head of state, the Council of State reverted to being the existing National Assembly Standing Committee, and the Council of Ministers - itself also a collective organ- was replaced by a definition of an executive cabinet, headed by a Prime Minister with wide amount of control over the executive.