The Star Malaysia

51 million set to vote as 24-hour ban on alcohol consumptio­n goes into effect

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BANGKOK: About 51 million people are set to vote in Thailand’s general election after almost five years under a military government that’s now looking to bring its leader back as prime minister.

The junta chief, Prayuth Chan-OCha, is backed by the royalist and military elite who have long dueled for power with exiled former leader Thaksin Shinawatra. Thaksin or his allies, who draw support from the rural poor, have won every election since 2001, only to be unseated by coups or the courts.

The contest between these dominant forces is expected to play out again in Sunday’s election. The poll is taking place under a military-backed constituti­on – Thailand’s 20th – that critics say gives appointed soldiers and bureaucrat­s the ability to stifle elected politician­s.

The establishm­ent is trying to extend and “legitimise its power” through the election and the constituti­on it enacted, said Punchada Sirivunnab­ood, an associate professor at Mahidol University’s Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities near Bangkok.

A big turnout is expected in South-East Asia’s second-largest economy, after Thais thronged ballot boxes in advanced voting last weekend.

Polls open at 8am and close nine hours later, when counting begins. A 24-hour alcohol ban was enforced from 6pm yesterday.

Provisiona­l results about the number of votes and constituen­cy seats won by each party are expected tonight.

But clarity on who will form the government and become prime minister may not emerge for days or weeks until the tally is certified, after which parliament must sit to elect a premier. — Bloomberg

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