Thailand Politics
Thailand’s Junta Prepares to Delay Democracy One More Time
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BANGKOK – Four years after the military coup in Thailand, the public are eager for the National Council for Peace and Order to deliver their promised November 2018 election.
On coming to power, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha assured people the country would return to democracy the next year. Each year since, there has been another delay and, in last October, he promised that voters would head to the polls in 2018.
But, in recent months, there have been signs that the election may be delayed until 2019. Prayuth has said he is no longer a soldier, but a politician. He and his cabinet have travelled to battleground provinces in a manner like campaigning, while traditional political parties are banned from political activity.
There are also reports that the junta plans to form a new party. A deputy leader of the Democratic Party said the possible election delay would help the junta, which needs time to establish its own party. Delaying the election to 2019 also gives them time to improve their popularity.
During the initial period of junta rule, the national council tackled pressing issues, including corruption. There were campaigns against illegal casinos, illegal logging and land encroachment in national parks, while corrupt mayors were arrested and rice farmers received the US$2.9 billion they were owed from the rice purchase scheme under Yingluck Shinawatra’s government.
But the drive against corruption slowed and the generals became the focus of investigations, with the deputy prime minister embroiled in a scandal over his 25 luxury watches worth more than US$1 million. Public opinion toward the leaders was also tainted by the callous reaction and non-transparent investigation into the death of a young army cadet after punishment by senior officers.
A new poll by Bangkok University now shows only 36.8 per cent of respondents would back Prayuth, down from 52.8 per cent last year.
Thailand’s education system stagnated years ago, and there have been no reforms to improve academic standards. National health care programs remain desperately underfunded.
An additional 12 months may help the national council make more progress, but it’s more likely that, by 2019, the country’s voters will have grown more weary of the generals.
But Prayuth does not require much public support to retain the premiership. Thailand’s 2017 constitution gives 250 military-appointed senators the authority to vote alongside the 500 members from the House of Representatives to select the next prime minister. Just 126 votes from the House of Representatives would be enough.
The prospects of a democratically elected civilian government leading the country are more distant than ever.
By Daniel Maxwell
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Daniel Maxwell is a writer and educator
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Thailand delays democracy