Bangkok Post

Prayut orders coalition unity

Budget bill meeting collapses in disarray

- AEKARACH SATTABURUT­H MONGKOL BANGPRAPA

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha yesterday instructed government coalition partners to resolve their difference­s after a meeting of a special House committee vetting the 2021 budget bill collapsed in disarray on Monday due to the lack of a quorum.

The July 20 meeting was brought to an abrupt end when a quorum count was proposed and the committee members from the coalition parties and the opposition camp left the room, leaving only 19 Palang Pracharath Party (PPRP) MPs. The meeting required at least 24 members to meet the quorum.

Bhumjaitha­i MP for Uthai Thani Chada Thaiseth proposed a quorum count after the coalition partners were said to be upset with the committee members from the ruling PPRP who appeared to lack decision-making power.

Gen Prayut emphasised that the panel members must patch things up and make sure that the deliberati­on process is completed by the deadline. Any delays would affect the public spending plan, he said.

“Concerned parties must iron out their problems and if they can’t, the budget making process will be affected.

They must hurry up and avoid getting into conflicts and keep up with the time frame,” he said.

Under the law, the budget bill deliberati­on process in the House must be completed within 105 days after which the draft law will be submitted to the Senate for considerat­ion and endorsemen­t.

Mr Chada yesterday blamed the PPRP for the collapse of the July 20 meeting, saying the ruling party failed to set up a clear framework for the committee’s work.

“We need to establish clear guidelines for budget scrutiny this year especially as the country faces the Covid-19 pandemic,” he said.

While Mr Chada admitted that there was a disagreeme­nt over the appointmen­ts of chairperso­ns of sub-committees, he insisted it had nothing to do with the meeting collapsing.

It was reported that the PPRP wanted to assume chairmansh­ip of all the seven panels.

Worawat Ua-apinyakul, a committee adviser from the Pheu Thai Party, said the scrutiny process was not making any progress as the panel never discussed how budget cuts would be made even though state agencies were invited to clarify their spending plans.

Asked about the row over the chairmansh­ip of the sub-committees, he said those panels were yet to be establishe­d but warned that the PPRP should compromise to avoid conflicts.

He also criticised the PPRP for not taking the budget bill deliberati­on seriously, saying the party did not send people with decision-making power to the committee meeting.

Varathep Rattanakor­n, deputy chairman of the budget scrutiny panel who presided over the meeting, yesterday dismissed as untrue media reports that the PPRP wanted to assume chairmansh­ip on all seven sub-committees.

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