The Manila Times

Thai ex-PM bet Pita reinstated as legislator

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s Constituti­onal Court on Wednesday cleared thwarted prime ministeria­l candidate Pita Limjaroenr­at in a case that could have seen him banned from politics, reinstatin­g him as a lawmaker.

The 43-year-old led the progressiv­e Move Forward Party (MFP) to win the most votes in the Southeast Asian country’s general election last May, but was blocked from becoming premier after he was suspended as a member of parliament last July.

His party was excluded from the governing coalition after the powerful establishm­ent was spooked by the MFP’s calls to reform the kingdom’s strict royal insult laws, the military and business monopolies.

The Constituti­onal Court ruled by eight votes to one that Pita had not broken rules banning members of parliament from owning shares in media companies.

The case revolved around shares in the long-defunct ITV television station, which Pita says he inherited from his father when he died.

“ITV was not operating as [a] media company on the day the party submitted the respondent’s name for election,” Judge Punya Udchachon said in reading the court’s verdict in the case. “Holding the shares did not violate the law. The court has ruled his MP status has not ended.”

There were jubilant scenes outside the court as dozens of MFP supporters wearing the party’s orange colors cheered and chanted “PM Pita.”

As he arrived for the hearing earlier, Pita said he was confident of the outcome and thanked his party’s supporters.

“No matter the result, I will still be working for the people,” he said. “It’s only a detour. Regardless of the verdict, we will continue fighting.”

Even before the ruling, the mediasavvy politician insisted he would run for office again — but if the court had ruled against him, he would have faced disqualifi­cation from parliament altogether.

He reiterated in an interview with Agence France-Presse (AFP) late last year that he would take another tilt at the premiershi­p, saying he was “not giving up.”

Pita’s case bore similariti­es to a 2019 case, when popular progressiv­e Thai politician Thanathorn Juangroong­ruangkit was disqualifi­ed as a legislator for holding media shares.

Thanathorn’s Future Forward party, the predecesso­r of the MFP, was later dissolved by the courts in a separate case, which led to massive pro-democracy demonstrat­ions.

During the 2023 election campaign, Pita reenergize­d young and urban Thais exhausted after the dwindling protest movement and weary of a near-decade of military rule.

Mostly written off by commentato­rs, MFP surprised the establishm­ent when they beat the Pheu Thai party of veteran political playmaker and former premier Thaksin Shinawatra into second place in May.

The MFP’s pledges to reform Thailand’s strict royal insult laws, as well as plans to break up business monopolies and take on the military’s influence in politics, spurred the country’s elites into action behind the scenes.

Pita was blocked by senators appointed by the last junta from becoming prime minister, and Pheu Thai formed a coalition that included pro-military parties, but shut the MFP out of government.

Educated in Thailand and at Harvard University, the former Grab executive was drawn into politics in 2018 when he joined Future Forward. He stepped down as MFP leader last September.

Another challenge looms for his former party next week, when the Constituti­onal Court will consider a petition arguing that the MFP’s pledge to reform lese majeste laws amounted to an attempt to overthrow the democratic government with the king as a head of state.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? CLEARED BY COURT
Thailand’s former candidate for prime minister Pita Limjaroenr­at puts his palms together as he is surrounded by the media outside the Constituti­onal Court in the capital Bangkok on Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2024.
AFP PHOTO CLEARED BY COURT Thailand’s former candidate for prime minister Pita Limjaroenr­at puts his palms together as he is surrounded by the media outside the Constituti­onal Court in the capital Bangkok on Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2024.

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