The Phnom Penh Post

Thai junta chief’s bid for PM intact

-

JUNTA chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha’s grip on power was tossed into doubt by the political cameo of a princess, but a week later his ambitions to rebrand as a civilian leader appear back on track, a survivor – for now – of Thailand’s treacherou­s politics.

Princess Ubolratana’s candidacy for premier for a party aligned with billionair­e ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, appeared to have kicked over a totem of Thai politics: that the military alone is the unassailab­le partner of the monarchy.

Minutes later Pray ut, a for mer a r my ch ief who sei zed power i n 2014, accepted the nomination for pr i me minister by a ju nta-l i nked part y, threatenin­g to put him on an elec tora l col l ision cou rse w it h a roya l.

In a country where the public rarely gets a read on the backroom power plays of the elite, much of Thai social media erupted in glee at the supposed fall from favour of the gruff, hectoring junta chief.

Rumours of an impending coup against Prayut and his junta spun out.

But hours later the political game turned on its head.

Ubol rat a na’s you nger brot her, King Maha Vajiralong­korn, blocked her “highly inappropri­ate” move into frontline politics with a rare statement publicly ex posing div isions inside the palace.

Prayut still standing

The Thaksin-aligned Thai Raksa Chart party which proposed her is now on a fast track to dissolutio­n by the courts for “hostile action to the constituti­onal monarchy”, threatenin­g to take with it the electoral aspiration­s of the Shinawatra camp.

That has left Prayut still very much in power – and closer than ever to becoming prime minister after the March 24 poll.

After nearly five years in power the 64-year-old Prayut still draws loyalty from many arch-royalists for his antiThaksi­n stance.

He toppled the government of Yingluck Shinawatra, Thaksin’s younger sister.

Since then he has tried – with mixed results – to expunge the clan’s influence from Thai politics, where the siblings remain vastly popular among the poor despite both being in selfexile to avoid jail terms.

But Prayut also draws derision from large sections of a public wearied by his choleric temper, finger-jabbing televised addresses and a political system rigged to secure the army’s stake in politics.

Yet, still standing after the spindryer events of the last week, Prayut loyalists say his bid for premier is in robust shape.

“The events from last week have proved he still has the confidence of the king,” a senior army officer told reporters on condition of anonymity.

“He seems confident in his chances of winning and the latest events prove he is probably right.”

Those chances are bolstered by a junta-scripted constituti­on that creates a fully appointed upper house and limits the number of seats available for the Shinawatra’s main electoral vehicle – Pheu Thai.

In the event of a hung parliament, it also allows for a premier from a minority party to be installed – which appears to be Prayut’s main route to the premiershi­p.

Given the assumed loya lt y of the junta-selected upper house, “Prayut only needs 126 seats [out of 500] in the lower house to win,” said Paul Chambers of the Center for Asean Communit y St udies at Naresua n Universit y.

“It is not a level and fair playing field,” he added.

As the princess’s political play sent a wave of uncertaint­y across the king- dom, Prayut was prodded on Monday into denying rumours of an impending coup as “fake news”.

It was a view endorsed by some of the country’s 76 governors who gathered to greet him on Thursday.

“I don’t believe there will be a coup. We don’t need that,” said Kiatisak Chantra, governor of northeaste­rn Maha Sarakham province.

For Thaksin’s parties, the road to power now looks long and difficult.

Thai Ra ksa Chart was meant to secure secondar y votes for t he part y list and join t he bloc of constituen­cy seats Pheu Thai expects to mop up i n its nor t h a nd nor t heaster n heartlands.

“Thaksin made a tactical error,” says Sophie Boisseau du Rocher, a Thai politics expert at the French Institute of Internatio­nal Relations (IFRI).

“Thai Raksa Chart will probably be dissolved, it will not be able to support Pheu Thai … Thaksin is gradually losing his aura.”

 ?? LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP ?? With weapons drawn camouflage­d troops leapt out of amphibious assault craft while explosions sounded and parachutis­ts glided in from above as the annual Cobra Gold war games took over a placid Thai beach on Saturday. Now in its 38th year, Cobra Gold is one of the largest military exercises in Asia, bringing thousands of forces from the US, Thailand, Singapore, Japan, Indonesia and Malaysia together for 11 days of training on Thai shores. This year’s drill includes some 2,000 US Marines, 1,000 US soldiers and hundreds from the country’s Navy and Air Force.
LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP With weapons drawn camouflage­d troops leapt out of amphibious assault craft while explosions sounded and parachutis­ts glided in from above as the annual Cobra Gold war games took over a placid Thai beach on Saturday. Now in its 38th year, Cobra Gold is one of the largest military exercises in Asia, bringing thousands of forces from the US, Thailand, Singapore, Japan, Indonesia and Malaysia together for 11 days of training on Thai shores. This year’s drill includes some 2,000 US Marines, 1,000 US soldiers and hundreds from the country’s Navy and Air Force.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia