The Star Malaysia

Bangkok to pick new governor

Poll comes as embattled PM fights to hold his ruling coalition together

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Millions of Bangkok voters will elect a new governor in the first major polls since pro-democracy protests rattled Thailand’s capital, with a former minister ousted in the 2014 military coup leading the race.

The poll comes as embattled Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha fights to hold his ruling national coalition together until a general election due within 12 months.

The bustling, traffic-clogged metropolis of 10 million people last elected a governor in 2013. After seizing power as military chief in 2014, Prayut sacked the incumbent and appointed his own man.

leading the 30-strong field of candidates is Chadchart sittipunt, a former transport minister in the civilian government kicked out of office in the most recent of the dozen coups to upend Thai politics since the birth of democracy in 1932.

He is running as an independen­t and says Bangkok voters want to move on from the entrenched tribal fault lines that have dominated Thai politics in recent years.

“You have many people in Bangkok who are fed up with politics as usual,” he said.

But the 55-year-old was a major figure in Pheu Thai – the opposition party of controvers­ial billionair­e former prime minister Thaksin shinawatra – running as its candidate for prime minister in 2019.

While Chadchart insists on his independen­ce, Pheu Thai has not fielded a candidate against him, leading some to view him as a proxy for the party.

opinion polls, meanwhile, put him well ahead of the incumbent Governor Aswin Kwanmuang, a former police general backed by Prayut.

Chadchart has pushed a liberal vision for Bangkok that includes tackling its notorious traffic jams and reducing pollution, as well as expanding green spaces in the concrete-dominated urban landscape with a promise to plant a million trees in four years.

low-lying Bangkok, on a tidal river, criss-crossed with canals and sinking into the marshy ground on which it is built, is highly vulnerable to the effects of climate change.

Flash floods are common in the rainy season as the city’s drains struggle to cope with the tropical downpours.

“i think many people feel that the quality of life has worsened during the last 10 years,” he said.

Chadchart has not expressed a clear view on the 2020 demonstrat­ions, which at their peak saw tens of thousands pour onto the streets of Bangkok to demand Prayut quit and make unpreceden­ted calls for reforms to the monarchy.

But after authoritie­s were criticised for cracking down heavy-handedly with tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon, he has indicated he would like to see a softer response in future.

“our job is not to take care of the soldiers or officials who do crack down, but to take care of the people,” he said.

While urban, affluent Bangkok is very different from most of Thailand – poorer, agricultur­al and less educated – some analysts see tomorrow’s poll as a foretaste of the upcoming national election.

Political analyst Thitinan Pongsudhir­ak of Chulalongk­orn University said the outcome would give some idea of the capital’s willingnes­s to back candidates of the royalist and military establishm­ent that dominates Thai politics.

“Bangkok is not Thailand, but the Bangkok governor election this time will be a bellwether for bigger polls to come,” he said.

For Chulalongk­orn University student Kamolwan ingsakunsu­k it is Chadchart’s plans, not his political allegiance, that means he will have her vote.

“When i listen to his policies and his comments on TV, i feel he knows the problems and his policies could solve some problems,” the 23-yearold said.

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