New Straits Times

REGIME CHANGE OR CONSOLIDAT­ION?

Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha has announced that the general election will be held by February next year if three conditions are met. To what extent will it result in political change or consolidat­ion for the incumbent Thai junta, asks ANTONIO L.

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THE Royal Thai Armed Forces has played a central role in all previous general elections (GEs) since the 1932 coup. RTAF Supreme Commander Thanchaiya­n Srisuwan reiterated the central role of the army and continues to support the political consolidat­ion and public policies under Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-Cha. While the self-appointed prime minister announced that he is not interested in retaining his position, the new pro-military Constituti­on virtually guarantees that he will be reelected PM as long as 376 out of 750 members of parliament (MP) vote for him in the lower house election slated for early 2019.

Prayut already controls the upper house given the fact that 200 senators had to be pre-approved by the junta. Prayut and his deputy Prawit Wongsuwan have sufficient MPs and senators to form a new political party.

Without ruling out his own political future, the prime minister believes in three conditions for the GE to take place; with the caveat that the military will not tolerate any public demonstrat­ions and political violence that is likely to occur once the election dates are fixed.

The first condition is that all political parties have to support the role and function of the National Peace Keeping Council (NPKO) of which the prime minister is the chairman. This situation is entrenched by the new pro-military Constituti­on that virtually guarantees that Prayut and his cabinet have ministeria­l positions regardless of the political party that wins. However, the glitch is that a winning party with more than 375 MPs will be able to overturn the NPKO/junta’s strangleho­ld on the government and people of Thailand.

The second condition laid out by the Thai PM is that the new election law that was changed in January 2018 will ensure political parties have sufficient preparatio­n time. But, both the Puea Thai and Democrat party spokesmen have argued that the law merely gives the NPKO more time to entrench its political power bases in Bangkok and other major cities of the kingdom.

The amended election law is perceived by political scientists from Chulalongk­orn University and Thammasat University to ensure that the NPKO and its network of supporters remain in a custodial position before, during and after the GE in 2019.

The third condition that Prayut hinted at in 2017 and is expected to reiterate in May/June 2018 is a fair and balanced conduct of the general election. The PM’s genuinenes­s was demonstrat­ed in March when the Election Commission (EC) received 34 applicatio­ns for political parties that seek approval to take part in the GE, the first time that the EC has been empowered since Prayut overthrew the democratic­allyelecte­d Yingluck Shinawatra government in 2014 over the multibilli­on baht rice-pledging scandal.

A professor from Rangsit University told the press that the relationsh­ip between the government and the military remains very strong.

A positive sign that democracy is alive is the participat­ion of Thai Summit Group CEO Thanathorn Juangroong­ruangkit and Thammasat University law professor Piyabutr Sangkanokk­ul. Their Future Forward party criticised the coups in 2006 and 2014 without directly mentioning Prayut.

The consequenc­es for Thai voters are clear. Firstly, there will be a clear win in the direction of the NPKO and the political party that it will back. Secondly, the likelihood of a military-supported putsch will only take place if the military fails to win a majority vote. Therefore, two scenarios are likely: the first is the consolidat­ion of political power by the incumbents and the second the transforma­tional changes to the military-backed junta to rejuvenate the old guard under Prayut.

A third consequenc­e that is very likely is that the balance of power will continue to shift towards the military leaders and away from the people.

Neverthele­ss, regardless of how powerful the NPKO/junta is today, they will still need the endorsemen­t of Rama X, King Maha Vajiralong­korn to hold the election.

A positive sign that democracy is alive is the participat­ion of Thai Summit Group CEO Thanathorn Juangroong­ruangkit and Thammasat University law professor Piyabutr Sangkanokk­ul.

Their Future Forward party criticised the coups in 2006 and 2014 ...

The writer is a visiting researcher at the Institute for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies Chulalongk­orn University, Thailand and Associate Professor and Head, Management and Security Studies, School of Business, Singapore University of Social Sciences

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha salutes members of the Royal Thai Army. Thailand has been under military rule for more than three years. The general election next year will be a crucial move in Thai politics.
REUTERS PIC Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha salutes members of the Royal Thai Army. Thailand has been under military rule for more than three years. The general election next year will be a crucial move in Thai politics.
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