The Borneo Post

Scores of poll winners could be disqualifi­ed in Thai vote

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s Election Commission said yesterday that scores of candidates who were tipped to secure elected seats in last month’s contentiou­s polls are under investigat­ion and could be disqualifi­ed, in a move that could shift yet-to-be-released final results.

The commission has come under fire for bungling ballot counts and delaying official results following the much- anticipate­d March 24 election, the first since a 2014 military coup.

The election has pitted the juntabacke­d Palang Pracharat party against Pheu Thai, a popular anti-military faction linked to an exiled billionair­e.

Both have claimed the right to govern in the wake of polls with final tallies not expected for several weeks.

An election commission­er said the body will investigat­e “66 people who got the highest votes in the constituen­cy system” who were hit with complaints.

“Whether these 66 candidates would be disqualifi­ed would have to depend on our investigat­ion,” said commission­er Pakorn Mahannop.

He added that investigat­ion results ‘will affect the calculatio­n’ of final parliament­ary seats.

Commission officials did not say what parties the candidates belonged to but said 300 complaints had been filed.

The vote is governed under a new military-scripted constituti­on that delegates 350 lower parliament seats to candidates who won their constituen­cies.

Another 150 ‘ party list’ seats will be allocated based on popular vote.

The 250 upper house seats are military-appointed, stacking the balance of power strongly in its favour.

Thailand’s Election Commission has been dogged with criticism since the poll over bungled vote counts, inconsiste­nt tallies and more than 2.1 million invalidate­d ballots.

Earlier this week it ordered a re- count in two polling stations and a new vote in six polling sites, citing conflictin­g numbers between voter turnout and ballots tabulated.

The body had previously said a final tally would be announced by May 9, but Pakorn said complete results may take even longer.

Early numbers showed Pheu Thai, the party linked to ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, securing the majority of the constituen­cy seats, with 137.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows supporters of Palang Pracharath Party attending their last party campaign rally outside a stadium in central Bangkok.
— Reuters photo File photo shows supporters of Palang Pracharath Party attending their last party campaign rally outside a stadium in central Bangkok.

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