This is not only an act of legal technical amendment, but the beginning of a process of fundamental restructuring the State apparatus towards streamlining, efficiency, better serving the people and adapting to development requirements in the new context.
From the plan to amend 8 articles and clauses, the National Assembly has agreed to only amend 5/120 articles and clauses in the Constitution. This adjustment is not simply concise, but reflects the spirit of openness, selective acceptance, and careful listening to sharp and practical comments from the people, experts, and National Assembly deputies themselves. Focusing on the most core provisions shows the determination to focus on streamlining the apparatus and reforming institutions.
The 2025 Constitution is the starting point, from here, the entire political system needs to move synchronously: Planning to organize a new apparatus, transferring cadres, redesigning functions - tasks, and issuing legal documents in a timely manner. And the most important thing: Everything must go openly, transparently and with a clear roadmap.
Time without waiting. Only two weeks after the new Constitution takes effect (16.), that is, from July 1, the district-level administrative unit will officially cease operations. At this time, many localities have experimented with two-level government, the current workload is very large, requiring both the implementation of the training level and the completion of the legal framework in the spirit of "running and lining up at the same time".
Running and lining up must be understood as a quick act but in order and control. That is the way to maintain discipline, not miss opportunities for reform, while ensuring political stability and effective governance. Institutional, mechanism and policy reform needs to go hand in hand with socio-economic development.
In that context, the role of a leader becomes even more key. We need a "steering" with strong political will, innovative leadership capacity, daring to think, daring to do and daring to take responsibility.
The revised Constitution has paved the way for an institutional revolution. What is needed now is drastic action to convert the governance model to creating - proactively serving - taking people and businesses as the center. This is not only a change in the structure of the apparatus, but a turning point in the thinking of national governance.