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Thai Poll Winner Pita Suspended by Court, Bid to be PM Hit

Thailand’s top court suspended Pita Limjaroenrat, leader of the election-winning Move Forward Party, on Wednesday in further blow to his party’s chance of taking office


Bunfight over Thailand's new government continues in Bangkok after court suspends Pita, leader of the poll-winning party.
Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat has been banned from politics for 10 years (Reuters photo from July 2023).

 

The bunfight over who will lead Thailand’s new government intensified in Bangkok on Wednesday, after a court suspended Pita Limjaroenrat, the young leader of the election-winning Move Forward Party.

Pita’s bid to become prime minister was rocked by the court decision to suspend him as a lawmaker, until it rules on a claim of him owning a stake in a media company.

Later, conservative rivals in the parliament blocked Pita’s second nomination to be a candidate as the next prime minister.

A US-educated liberal, Pita now faces a difficult path to the top job, lacking the backing of more than half of the bicameral parliament, given fierce resistance from the royalist military, which strongly opposes his party’s anti-establishment proposals.

The chances of Pheu Thai Party – affiliated with ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, who has been living in exile for over a decade – forming a separate coalition to take power appear to have strengthened, despite the fact they were once the military’s arch-rivals.

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‘Moves to oust me being ramped up’

The legislature convened for Pita’s second shot at the top job on Wednesday but his rivals moved immediately to derail him by questioning the parliamentary rule under which he was nominated by his eight-party alliance.

As an hours-long debate ensued, the Constitutional Court separately announced Pita had been temporarily suspended as a lawmaker over an allegation that he violated election rules by holding shares in a media firm, taking on its second complaint against him in six days.

The suspension does not bar Pita from running for premier, and the 42-year-old told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday that he was expecting “pre-planned” obstacles, describing efforts by the military to stop him as like a “broken record”.

Thailand has been run by a caretaker administration since March and 65 days have passed since Move Forward’s stunning May 14 election triumph over military-backed parties, in what was widely considered a clear public rejection of nine years of government controlled by generals.

“Thailand is not the same since May 14. We have come halfway from the people’s victory and there is another half to go,” a smiling Pita told the house as he acknowledged the court’s suspension order, receiving fist-bumps and applause.

Wednesday’s drama was the latest twist in a two-decade battle for power in Thailand between elected parties and conservatives, including the military, that has included political bans, court interventions, two coups and at times violent street protests that claimed dozens of lives.

Hundreds of Pita’s supporters gathered peacefully in Bangkok to protest against the efforts to stop him, some carrying signs denouncing senators for refusing to support him.

 

Army appointed Senate blocking path to power

The progressive Move Forward ran a disruptive election campaign in which they mastered social media to target and win over millions of urban and young voters, promising bold institutional reforms to upend the conservative status quo.

But its agenda has put it on a collision course with powerful conservative interests, demonstrated by the legal cases against him and a determined effort by rival legislators from the outgoing, army-backed government to keep him at bay.

A constitution drafted by the military after a 2014 coup and skewed in its favour ensured that Pita was blocked in the first vote last week by the army-appointed Senate, which has served as a bulwark against elected politicians and can effectively torpedo attempts to form governments.

Lawmakers were still debating the challenge to Pita’s nomination late in the afternoon on Wednesday, with calls for it to be voided and efforts by his allies to forge ahead with the planned prime ministerial vote.

The contest was expected to be his last, with Pita pledging to make way if he fails for coalition partner and political heavyweight Pheu Thai to field its prime ministerial candidate in the next round.

“It is now clear that in the current system, winning public approval is not enough to run the country but we need approval from the Senate too,” Pita posted on Instagram during the debate.

“And maybe there is not enough support for my name to be nominated for the second time.”

 

  • Reuters with additional editing and reporting by Jim Pollard

 

NOTE: This report was updated with further details (on Pita losing his bid to be nominated for a second vote in the parliament to be the next PM).

 

ALSO SEE:

 

Thailand’s Pita Says ‘Enough’ Senators Will Back Him to be PM

 

Thai Economy Recovering, But Clouds Linger Over Poll Outcome

 

Shadow of Thailand’s Military Hangs Over Latest Election Win

 

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.