Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Thai opposition party to boycott next election

- GRANT PECK AND JINDA WEDEL

BANGKOK — Thailand’s main opposition Democrat Party said Saturday that it would boycott February’s general election, deepening a weeks-long political crisis over protesters’ efforts to oust the government and force political changes.

The party’s leader, former Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, announced the boycott after a meeting of party executives, saying the decision was made to ensure that Thailand’s government will “represent the people once again.”

A spokesman for the ruling party said the Democrats were guided by the knowledge that they knew they would lose the election.

The Democrats’ position reflects the stand taken by street protesters demanding that Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra step down ahead of the elections. The demonstrat­ors want an appointed interim government to institute changes before any new polls are held.

The Democrats, who are closely allied with the protest movement, also led an election boycott in 2006 that helped destabiliz­e the government and paved the way for a military coup that ousted then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, Yingluck’s older brother.

Abhisit said he had “to accept the truth that the people believe that even if the Democrat Party runs in this election, they believe they will be not be able to reform the country.”

“We are choosing the harder path, making the long-term decision to represent the people once again,” he said.

The Democrat Party has not won a national election since 1992, while Thaksin and his allies have won every election since 2001.

The protest movement, led by a former senior member of the Democrat Party, Suthep Thaugsuban, demands that the Feb. 2 polls not be held if Yingluck stays on as caretaker prime minister. Abhisit, however, distanced his party from the position of the so-called People’s Democratic Reform Committee, saying the Democrats respected the concept of elections.

Promphong Nopparit, a spokesman for Yingluck’s ruling Pheu Thai Party, said the Democrats’ action was not unexpected, and it was taken because they knew they would lose.

“It is a political game,” Promphong said. “In the end, they have the same objective, which is to overthrow Yingluck’s government and overthrow the democratic system.”

In 2006, Thaksin called early elections to try to defuse calls for his resignatio­n on grounds of purported corruption and abuse of power. His party won, but the three parliament­ary opposition parties boycotted the polls, and millions of voters marked an abstention box on their ballots as a protest against the prime minister.

The boycott and abstention­s meant that in some constituen­cies, winners could not be certified because they failed to attain a legal minimum share of the registered vote. The inconclusi­ve results left Parliament unable to convene.

After King Bhumibol Adulyadej publicly lectured judges that they had a responsibi­lity to end the deadlock, the nation’s top courts annulled the polls, compoundin­g Thaksin’s troubles.

Earlier Saturday, Yingluck formally proposed a plan for making political changes after the election. It included having election candidates take an oath to support the creation of an overhaul council immediatel­y after taking office, having the council’s representa­tives come from all walks of life at local and national levels, and mandating that the council finish its work within two years.

Thailand has been wracked by sometimes-violent political conflict since the coup that toppled billionair­e Thaksin, who has lived in self-imposed exile since 2008 to avoid jail time on a corruption conviction.

The protesters say Thai politics are hopelessly corrupt under Thaksin’s continuing influence and that he buys his electoral support from the country’s urban and rural poor. They believe that traditiona­l one-man, one-vote democracy doesn’t work because the poor are not educated enough to choose responsibl­e leaders.

Thaksin’s supporters say he is disliked by Bangkok’s elite because he has shifted power from the traditiona­l ruling class.

The protests, which started Oct. 31, have drawn crowds as large as 200,000 people.

Protest leaders have called for another major rally and march today. They have also hinted they might try to disrupt the registrati­on of election candidates, which begins Monday.

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