The Star Malaysia

No calm before election storm

More shocks are anticipate­d before the polls in the Land of Smiles.

- BUNN NAGARA newsdesk@thestar.com.my Bunn Nagara is Senior Fellow at the Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (ISIS) Malaysia.

MORE than ever since the latest military coup of 2014, Thailand seems likely to stagger towards a scheduled election.

Some shocks had been expected and the tense situation did not disappoint. More are being anticipate­d before election day on March 24.

The pro-Thaksin Thai Raksa Chart (TRC) party caused a storm of controvers­y by nominating Princess Ubolratana, King Vajiralong­korn’s elder sister, as its sole candidate for Prime Minister.

This was such a jolt to a constituti­onal monarchy forbidding the direct involvemen­t of royal personages in politics as to draw a swift rebuke from Vajiralong­korn.

In mitigation, Ubolratana claimed to be just an “ordinary” candidate with no royal privileges. However, few were convinced.

She was fêted everywhere like the royalty everyone knew she was, and she acted the part. Her royal titles were removed when she married a foreigner in 1972, but were expected to be returned upon Vajiralong­korn’s coronation in May.

A formal complaint was filed with the Elections Commission (EC) against her candidacy. The EC rejected the candidacy soon after Vajiralong­korn opposed it, and the TRC swiftly withdrew it.

The EC has sought the party’s dissolutio­n, which the Constituti­onal Court will consider this Wednesday. Some party leaders have already suspended their election campaign until a court decision.

Having Ubolratana as sole candidate for Prime Minister might have swung it in the TRC’s favour and Thaksin’s, owing to the princess’ popularity. But now that has become a party liability.

Thus Ubolratana’s political career ended before it had begun. That sums up the likely fortunes of virtually all the political players in this much-touted election.

Prime Minister Prayut Chanocha, coup leader and retired army chief, is popular but not his party – or rather he is far more popular than his party. Thailand allows for separate electoral considerat­ions for candidate and party.

Yet technicall­y Prayut has no party, heading a government with his appointed ministers all backed by the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party. He wants to remain Prime Minister after the election, but that depends much more on everyone else.

The army itself, so decisive in extra-parliament­ary terms, is not above shooting itself in the foot. Its warning to parties against discussing cuts to the military budget backfired badly.

The TRC hopes to escape a ban, but when a court judgment is finally made it may have too little time to promote a new Prime Ministeria­l candidate. Meanwhile its nomination of Ubolratana still rankles with many.

The Democrat Party (DP) is the country’s oldest party but has never enjoyed a clear parliament­ary majority. With its last heyday a generation ago, it has since failed to capitalise on its strengths in Bangkok and the southern provinces.

The rise of the new Future Forward Party (FFP) also signals the DP’s decline. The FFP’s natural base among the urban middle class should have been the Democrat’s, but a chunk of this demographi­c has moved to the FFP.

DP supporters hoping to check

the FFP’s advance may be relieved by pending legal action against some party leaders for an “online speech” under the Computer Crimes Act.

The offending post outlined what the FFP believed were plans by junta leaders to maintain a mandate to govern after the election. Even that is now taboo.

As a fledgling Bangkok-based party still under a year old, the FFP lacks an effective nationwide support base or network. But it panders well to those who still imagine Bangkok politics equals national politics.

Despite considerab­le media hype, the FFP is unlikely to win anything substantia­l on its own. Nonetheles­s, the expected formal prosecutio­n of party leaders will be seen as persecutio­n and contribute to a growth in support.

The same applies to the TRC – if it is banned, support for other pro-Thaksin parties such as Pheu Thai may balloon.

Thaksin himself, in exile abroad, is seen as mastermind­ing much of the action but still to little effect.

He remains politicall­y ambitious but has changed in some ways.

Thaksin no longer seeks the premiershi­p as long as he can manoeuvre behind the scenes. And he no longer thinks and acts in mere party terms, but in terms of a movement incorporat­ing several parties.

Any ban on a pro-Thaksin party will result in the move by party leaders to another pro-Thaksin party. That has happened before and may happen again.

Whole parties have also moved between the pro- and anti-Thaksin camps. Where politics has become so polarised, this is nothing short of remarkable – but not in a good way.

A weakness of the Thai system is that no attractive ideology exists in any of the parties. A strength is that no real ideology exists at all.

Electoral politics today sees the simultaneo­us rise of official stakes, public expectatio­ns and popular demands. It may yet end unhappily in the Land of Smiles.

 ?? — AP ?? Mother of shocks: The pro-Thaksin Thai Raksa Chart party caused a storm of controvers­y by nominating Princess Ubolratana, King Vajiralong­korn’s elder sister, as its sole candidate for Prime Minister.
— AP Mother of shocks: The pro-Thaksin Thai Raksa Chart party caused a storm of controvers­y by nominating Princess Ubolratana, King Vajiralong­korn’s elder sister, as its sole candidate for Prime Minister.
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