PeterRS Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago I am rather surprised there has been no thread dedicated to the General Election currently in progress - apart from bars not serving alcohol. Judging by the result of the last election three years ago won by the new Move Forward Party with massive support largely from younger generations, this one could go the same way. The trouble with Thai politics is that the elite and those in oower never want to give it up. The modernist progressive Move Forward party which won the last election was disallowed largely on the basis of trumped up charges. The elitist Consitutional Court banned the party and its populist leader Pita Limjaroenrat from politics for ten years. The reason for Khun Pita being banned would have meant nothing in most other countries. But he and his team failed to do their utmost in due diligence to ensure there was no reason for banning them. On this flimsy technicality the elite acted. Sadly this is not uncommon in Thailand and the Constitutional Court cearly is made up mostly of the elite. This year there is a subtle difference in the election. Electors have three botes to make. The first for an MP to serve their constituency. The second for a list of party's hopeful MPs nationwide. Of the 500 MPs, 400 will be elected on the basis of the winner takes all. The 100 party-ist seats are allocated proportionately around the country. The third vote this time is in effect a referendum: do electors want a new Constitution for the country? How this Constitution will be drafted and what it will include is in the lap of the Gods - presumably the elite Gods! Of the five major parties contesting the election, all but one have played a role in the last government. Following the disbandment of Move Forward, Pheu Thai gained the next most votes. This was the Shinawatra Clan party set up after its earlier party had been banned more than a decade ago. That was led by Thaksin's daughter, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, the youngest in his clan to rule the government. Her idiotic leaked phone call with former PM of Cambodia Hun Sen led to her resignation. And we thought that's it! The end of Shinawatra influence. But it seems we were too hasty. For the coming election, Pheu Thai has nominated Yodchanan Wongsawat, a nephew of Thaksin, as its leader! The minority BJP has put forward its recent Prime Minister, Anutin Charnvirakul, a highy ambitious snake-like figure who dissolved parliament presumably in an attempt to seek a majority. The big question mark around this election is how the new party, the People's Party, formed from the rump of the banned Move Forward, will fare. Factually it won the last election with 151 seats against Pheu Thai's 141. But it won a whacking majority of the votes with 14.4 million votes against Pheu Thai's 10.9 million. More to the point, Move Forward gained a much larger slice of the city and younger electors' votes. Pheu Thai may hold a majority of votes in Northeast which has 133 votes up for grabs. How many of these may go to the new party is anyone's guess. The new party's basic platform is that Thailand is trapped in outdated systems that must be changed before the country can really move forward. Anutin and other parties are gambling on national security and sovereignty. There is a far better argued article in the Bangkok Post (see below). https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/politics/3192080/democracy-calls-so-whats-new-this-time TMax and jimmie50 2 Quote
TMax Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago My view is there will be a coalition of sorts formed after the election as no single party will win a clear majority and after what happened last time, any party thinking of forming a coalition with a certain party (of a particular clan) had better watch their backs. I truly hate dynasty politics (where families want to keep power through their generations) and just wish people in the Asia region would wake up to it and vote accordingly. jimmie50 and bkkmfj2648 1 1 Quote
hank75 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 2 hours ago, PeterRS said: Her idiotic leaked phone call with former PM of Cambodia Hun Sen led to her resignation. I still wonder occasionally who leaked that phone call, was it a disgruntled subordinate as “Uncle” claimed or the man himself jimmie50 and TMax 2 Quote
PeterRS Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago I suspect - and this is merely a guess - it was one of Anutin's henchmen. His personal ambition has long been very obvious. Creating a massive fuss over that call played perfectly into his hands and handed him the premiership. Quote