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2011 Vietnamese legislative election


FieldValue
countryVietnam
typeparliamentary
previous_election2007 Vietnamese legislative election
previous_year2007
next_election2016 Vietnamese legislative election
next_year2016
seats_for_electionAll 500 seats in the National Assembly
majority_seats251
election_date22 May 2011
turnout99.51%
image1Nguyen Phu Trong 2013.jpg
leader1Nguyễn Phú Trọng
party1Communist Party of Vietnam
last_election1450 seats
seats1454
seat_change14
image2Vietnam Fatherland Front placeholder.svg
leader2
party2Non-party & independents
last_election243 seats
seats246
seat_change23
titlePrime Minister
before_electionNguyen Tan Dung
alliance1Fatherland Fr.
alliance2Fatherland Fr.

Parliamentary elections were held in Vietnam on 22 May 2011. Since Vietnam is a single-party state, the ruling Communist Party of Vietnam was guaranteed to win a majority.

Campaign

According to the Ministry of Home Affairs, there were 827 candidates. 31.4% were women, 14.3% were not members of the Communist Party, 16.1% were members of ethnic minorities and 22.1% were candidates running for reelection. Regardless of party standing, all candidates are evaluated by the Fatherland Front.

82 people applied to be self-nominated candidates, with the party officials eventually selecting a list of 15 self-nominated candidates running in the election. Despite this, Vietnam saw an increase of self-nominated candidates (82) in 2011 compared to 30 in 2007. Some pro-democracy and human rights activists were a part of the self-nominated group, who did not receive the required approval. These included lawyers Le Quoc Quan, a former fellow for the National Endowment for Democracy and Cu Huy Ha Vu and Le Cong Dinh, both sentenced to jail for security and propaganda risks against the state.

The 14 politburo seats were also up for election, though these elections were held in small electoral districts chosen by the party leaders. Thus, not all Vietnamese voters had a say in the politburo election decision.

Results

During the 2011 election, Vietnam had an estimated 62,200,000 registered voters and of those registered 61,900,000 ballots were reportedly cast. Of the 500 members elected, 333 were first-time members and four were self-nominated. Almost all of them had at least a bachelor's degree; 15.6% were from ethnic minorities, 24.4% were women, and 8.4% were not members of the Communist Party. Non-party members, who managed to gain a seat in the National Assembly, include brother and sister duo Dang Thanh Tam and Dang Thi Hoang Yen from Saigon Investment Group.

Aftermath

Following the elections, on 25 July the new National Assembly elected Trương Tấn Sang as the new president, with 483 of the 496 National Assembly members voting for him.

References

References

  1. (May 20, 2011). "Truong Sa residents cast early votes in legislative elections". [[Thanh Nien]].
  2. Ian Timberlake. (May 22, 2011). "One-party Vietnam votes in national election". [[Agence France-Presse.
  3. "Vietnam holds National Assembly election - People's Daily Online".
  4. Union, Inter-Parliamentary. "IPU Parline database: Viet Nam (Quoc-Hoi), Last elections".
  5. aujourd'hui, Vietnam. (2011-05-23). "Vietnamese voters unmoved by election fanfare".
  6. (23 March 2016). "Are Vietnam's elections becoming more democratic?".
  7. aujourd'hui, Vietnam. (2011-05-23). "Vietnamese voters unmoved by election fanfare".
  8. Ruwitch, John. "Party wins big in Vietnam, but with a few twists".
  9. "IFES Election Guide {{!}} Elections: Vietnam Parl May 2011".
  10. "500 legislators elected in Vietnam - People's Daily Online".
  11. "Ballots, banners, but little budging". The Economist.
  12. [http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90777/90851/7451057.html Truong Tan Sang elected Vietnamese state president] Xinhua, 25 July 2011
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