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To Lam wins second term to rule Vietnam through 2030

Vietnam reappoints To Lam as Communist Party chief, backing sweeping reforms and ambitious 10% growth goals to boost stability and attract investors

HANOI: Vietnam’s top leader To Lam was appointed on ​Friday as head of the ruling Communist Party for the next five years, state media reported, as he pledged to turbocharge growth in the export-reliant nation.

In the one-party state, Lam was ​re-elected “unanimously” to the country’s most powerful job by 180 party officials from a newly-formed committee at the end ‌of the five-yearly party congress, according to the Vietnam News Agency citing a ⁠press release from the party.

At a press conference being prepared to conclude the party congress, Lam’s name appeared under the title general secretary, and an official confirmed the party leader would be speaking.

Sweeping reforms

During his brief prior stint as party chief since mid-2024, Lam presided over fast ⁠growth underpinned by sweeping reforms that won him strong support but also criticism, as tens of thousands of civil servants lost their jobs while he promoted faster decision-making and less red tape.

Aware of the discontent stirred by those reforms, Lam ‌moved early to secure support from rival factions within the party, including the powerful military, according to officials ⁠familiar with the process.

As concerns mounted about his plans to bolster private conglomerates at the expense of state-owned firms, Lam issued a directive ahead of the party congress underscoring the “leading role” of state enterprises, which include army-controlled telecom and defence giant Viettel.

“He normally meticulously prepares for his moves,” said Le Hong Hiep, senior fellow at the ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute, noting that Lam, as state security minister, ‌manoeuvred deftly to reach the apex of Vietnam’s political system in 2024 when his late predecessor Nguyen Phu Trong was facing prolonged health issues.

Lam’s re-election as party chief sends a reassuring message to foreign investors who regularly cite political stability as a key factor in Vietnam’s appeal.

Lam, 68, is also seeking to become president, with a decision expected to be announced later.

But Hiep cautioned that Lam’s bid to combine ⁠the two top roles — a system ‌resembling the model under Xi Jinping in neighbouring China — “could pose risks to Vietnam’s political system,” which has traditionally depended on collective leadership and internal checks.

Targets 10% growth

Earlier this week, addressing congress delegates seating in red-upholstered seats in a red-carpeted conference hall under ​a towering statue of party’s founder Ho Chi Minh, Lam promised annual growth above 10% through the decade – an ambitious target which differs from ⁠World Bank’s ⁠forecasts of an average 6.5% yearly expansion this year and next.

Lam wants to achieve that by changing the country’s growth model, ‌which has hinged for decades on cheap labour and exports, turning the Southeast Asian nation into a high-middle income economy by 2030 thanks to a boost in innovation and efficiency.

In his first months as party chief, he launched the most comprehensive overhaul of the country’s public administration and government in decades, and has promised ​to continue with his reform drive, despite concerns over financial risks, controversial ‌infrastructure and favouritism.

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