The Chairman of the National Assembly of Vietnam () is the legislative speaker of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, presiding over the National Assembly. The National Assembly is, in the words of the constitution, "the highest representative organ of the people; the highest organ of state power". This position was formerly designated as the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National Assembly of Vietnam () from 1946 to 1981.
The chairman is elected by the deputies (members) of the National Assembly in the first season of the assembly's tenure. The Standing Committee, over which the chairman presides, is a permanent body in charge of the National Assembly's activities when it is not in session. The chairman and the other members of the Standing Committee have to resign from their posts when the National Assembly dissolves itself, which it normally does every five years. The chairman presides over the sessions of the National Assembly and authenticates laws and resolutions passed by the National Assembly by signing them. The chairman leads the activities of the Standing Committee and organises its external relations with other state bodies and is responsible for maintaining cordial relations between the members of the Standing Committee. The deputies of the National Assembly have the right to question the chairman.
The powers and prestige of the office of chairman has varied throughout the years. For instance, the two first office holders Nguyá» n VÃÂn Tá» and Bùi Bằng ÃÂoàn were not members of the Communist Party, while Trðá»Âng Chinh, the fourth chairman, was ranked second in the Politburo hierarchy. Still, of the ten people who have chaired the National Assembly, five of them have been members of the Politburo. The current chairman is Trần Thanh Mẫn.
The first chairman of the Standing Committee of the National Assembly was the scholar Nguyá» n VÃÂn Tá»Â; he was not a member of the Communist Party. On 3 March 1946, under the chairmanship of Nguyá» n VÃÂn Tá»Â, the National Assembly formed the first government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. Nguyá» n VÃÂn Tá» was succeeded in office on 9 November 1946 by Bùi Bằng ÃÂoàn, a poet and another non-Communist Party member. While he was never a member of the Communist Party, he was a committed revolutionary. Tôn ÃÂức Thắng succeeded Bùi Bằng ÃÂoàn as chairman in 1955, and was the first chairman to be a member of the Communist Party. Trðá»Âng Chinh became the fourth and longest-serving chairman of the National Assembly in Vietnamese history, holding the post from 1960 to 1981, when he became chairman of the State Council, a newly established post. Nguyá» n Hữu Thá»Â, a Southerner, succeeded Trðá»Âng in 1981, as chairman, but he was not a member of the Politburo. Nguyá» n Hữu Thá» stepped down as chairman in 1987, and was succeeded by Lê Quang ÃÂạo, another non-Politburo member. As with Nguyá» n Hữu Thá»Â, Lê Quang ÃÂạo's tenure lasted one term. Nông ÃÂức Mạnh was elected chairman in 1992, and held office until 2001 Nông was the first chairman who came from a minority background, the Tày, and was the first chairman since Trðá»Âng who was a Politburo member. Nông stepped down in 2001, and was succeeded by Nguyá» n VÃÂn An, who served as chairman from 2001 until 2006. On 26 June 2006 Nguyá» n Phú Trá»Âng was elected chairman with a majority of 84.58% of the National Assembly deputies in favour. Nguyá» n Phú Trá»Âng stepped down in 2011 because of his election to the post of General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam, and was succeeded by Nguyá» n Sinh Hùng. Nguyá» n Sinh Hùng stepped down on 31 March 2016, and was replaced by Nguyá» n Thá» Kim Ngân. She's the first woman to hold the office. Nguyá» n Thá» Kim Ngân stepped down on 31 March 2021, and was replaced by Vðáng ÃÂình Huá»Â. On 2 May 2024, Vðáng ÃÂình Huá» was dismissed, and National Assembly Standing Vice Chairman Trần Thanh Mẫn was assigned to become the acting chairman.
General<br /> The number of chairmen of the National Assembly, their names, and when they took and left office, was taken from this source:
Specific