Vietnam Elects To Lam as President, Embracing Xi-Style Leadership Amid Economic Challenges
April 7, 2026
Translating ambitious reforms into tangible outcomes remains a challenge amid energy shocks and growth shortfalls relative to targets.
The overarching narrative frames a strategic realignment focused on modernizing the economy through technology and private sector engagement within a still-strong one-party system.
Lam has stated that preserving peace and stability is his top priority to enable faster, sustainable growth and broad improvement in livelihoods.
In his oath before the National Assembly, Lam underscored guiding priorities of peace, stability, and improving people’s living standards.
The swearing-in ceremony framed his agenda around maintaining stability to support rapid, sustainable development and shared prosperity.
The administration emphasizes lifting citizens’ livelihoods through development and reform, while pursuing economic reforms to diversify away from heavy reliance on low-cost manufacturing.
Reform prospects are complicated by global dynamics, including U.S.-China tensions and energy disruptions, and domestic constraints such as human rights concerns and political dissent.
Vietnam’s economy posted 7.8% growth in Q1, signaling progress yet underscoring challenges in achieving ambitious growth goals.
Early economic data show 7.8% annualized growth in the first quarter, faster than last year but below the 9.1% target and softer than late 2025 amid global energy shocks.
Lam had already served in both roles on a caretaker basis after a 2024 leadership transition and has since broadened Vietnam’s diplomatic footprint and strategic partnerships.
Vietnam elected Communist Party General Secretary To Lam as president for a five-year term, consolidating control over both the party and the state and signaling a centralized leadership model akin to China’s Xi-style governance.
Observers say Lam’s dual roles enable faster decision-making and policy coherence to push reforms, though critics warn of risks from concentrated power and insufficient institutional reform.
Summary based on 24 sources
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Sources

AP News • Apr 7, 2026
Vietnam elects Communist Party chief To Lam as president | AP News
The Times Of India • Apr 7, 2026
Vietnam's To Lam consolidates power with presidential perch
Gulf News: Latest UAE news, Dubai news, Business, travel news, Dubai Gold rate, prayer time, cinema • Apr 6, 2026
Vietnam parliament convenes to confirm new state leaders
The Diplomat • Apr 7, 2026
Vietnam Communist Party Chief To Lam Appointed as State President