National Assembly of Vietnam
The National Assembly of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is the unicameral parliament and highest organ of state power of Vietnam. The National Assembly is the only branch of government in Vietnam and, in accordance with the principle of unified power, all state organs are subservient to it.
The National Assembly is a 500-delegate unicameral body elected to a five-year term. It normally sits twice a year, or more frequently if called for by the National Assembly Standing Committee.
The assembly appoints the president, the prime minister, the chief justice of the Supreme People's Court of Vietnam, the head of the Supreme People's Procuracy of Vietnam, and the 21-member Government.
Constitutionally, the National Assembly is the highest government organization and the highest-level representative body of the people. It has the power to draw up, adopt, and amend the constitution and to make and amend laws. It also has the responsibility to legislate and implement state plans and budgets. Through its constitution-making powers it defines its own role and the roles of the Vietnamese State President, the Vietnamese Government, the local people's councils and people's committees, the Supreme People's Court, and the Supreme People's Procuracy. The assembly can replace and remove government ministers, the chief justice of the Supreme People's Court, and the procurator general of the Supreme People's Procuracy. Finally, it has the de jure power to initiate or conclude wars and to assume other duties and powers it deems necessary.
In practice, like its counterparts in other communist states, the National Assembly has been characterized as a rubber stamp body of the Communist Party of Vietnam or only being able to affect issues of low sensitivity to the regime. The CPV controls nomination and election processes at every level. The CPV has great influence over the executive and exercises control through the 150-member Central Committee, which elects the 15-member Politburo at national party congresses held every five years. All senior government positions are held by members of the party. While vested with great lawmaking and oversight powers on paper, in practice the National Assembly does little more than ratify decisions already made by the CPV and its Politburo.
History of the National Assembly of Vietnam
Origins
The precursor of the current National Assembly of Vietnam was the National Representatives' Congress, convened on August 16, 1945, in the northern province of Tuyên Quang. This Congress supported Viet Minh's nationwide general uprising policy against Japanese and French forces in Vietnam. It also appointed the National Liberation Committee as a provisional government.- The First National Assembly
The first session of the First National Assembly took place on March 2, 1946 with nearly 300 deputies in the Hanoi Opera House. Nguyễn Văn Tố was appointed as the Chairman of the National Assembly's Standing Committee. The First National Assembly approved Hồ Chí Minh as the head of government and his cabinet, and the former Emperor Bảo Đại as "the Supreme Advisor". The second session, Bùi Bằng Đoàn was appointed to be the Chairman of the National Assembly's Standing Committee. Tôn Đức Thắng was Acting Chairman from 1948, and from 1955, when Đoàn died, he was Chairman of the Standing Committee.
The first and second Constitutions of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam were passed by this National Assembly in 1946 and 1959, respectively.
The term of the First National Assembly was prolonged due to the war situation in Vietnam, particularly the partition of Vietnam according to the Geneva Accords of 1954. From 1954 to 1976, the National Assembly's activities were only effective in North Vietnam.
Divided Vietnam (1954–1976)
North Vietnam
Because the State of Vietnam claimed that it did not sign the Geneva Accords and doubted about the possibility of free elections in the North in July 1955, a nationwide general election for reunification could not be organized. The Second National Assembly was formed by 362 elected deputies of the North and 91 deputies of the South from the First National Assembly who continued their term. Trường Chinh was appointed as the Chairman of the National Assembly's Standing Committee and held this position until 1981.The Third National Assembly consisted of 366 elected deputies from the North and 87 deputies continuing their term. The Third National Assembly's term was prolonged due to the war situation. President Hồ Chí Minh died during the Third National Assembly's term, and was succeeded by Tôn Đức Thắng.
- The Fourth National Assembly
- The Fifth National Assembly
South Vietnam
The predecessor of the Republic of Vietnam was the State of Vietnam, which had no parliament but only a National Advisory Council of 45 people appointed by the Chief of State. Due to war conditions, the state could not hold parliamentary elections but could only hold municipal elections in January 1953. After the Republic of Vietnam was formed in 1955, it organized parliamentary elections on 4 March 1956, leading to the establishment of its own parliament and constitution on 26 October that year. It initially had a unicameral parliament. After the new constitution was passed in 1967, it had two parliamentary chambers: the Senate and the House of Representatives.After the Fall of Saigon, the Republic of South Vietnam also held the People's Assembly as its sole legislature.
Since 1976
- The Sixth National Assembly
The "sixth" numbering indicates that it is the constitutional continuation of the National Assembly of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam in the North.
- The Seventh National Assembly
- The Eighth National Assembly
The 1987 election chose 496 deputies for the Eighth National Assembly. In this term, the National Assembly approved the 1992 Constitution, in which the citizen's personal ownership of properties in business was guaranteed. Lê Quang Đạo was appointed to be the National Assembly's Chairman.
- The Ninth National Assembly
- The Tenth National Assembly
- The Eleventh National Assembly
After the Tenth National Congress of CPV, he retired. In the middle of 2006, Nguyễn Phú Trọng was appointed as the 9th chairman of the National Assembly.
- The Twelfth National Assembly
- The Thirteenth National Assembly
- The Fourteenth National Assembly
- The Fifteenth National Assembly