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Pheu Thai to unveil post-election coalition this morning


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1 hour ago, Baerboxer said:

 

Your like a broken record. 

 

PTP polled less than half the votes in this election than 2011. Shows how the people now regard the crook and his crime family.

 

Thaksin never staged a coup because he never had the military on board. He had the police in his pocket but they weren't powerful enough to keep him in office let alone stage a coup. Even though PTP were in power they couldn't follow the correct procedures and tried to sneak and fiddle his amnesty through. The reaction from the public, not the mob who later hi-jacked it for then own reasons, but the real public disdain spoke volumes. And has probably been reflected at the ballot box.

 

PTP's trickery in lying to the people, lying to the opposition about not having a vote and then having one after the opposition went home, MP's voting for absent colleagues, the court cases, threats to judges, threats to any critics and opposition etc suggests they are no better really than others. But have never quiet managed to get the level of control and power they want. To suggest they are moral just because they won an election his sophistry.

 

Thaksin and Hun Sen are close friends. Who gave Yingluck a Cambodian passport. A Shin girl married a son of one of Hun Sen's close allies. The difference between the Junta and Thaksin is the Junta have the muscle and Thaksin doesn't. So he had to be craftier and more manipulative. And no doubt he's very good at that. But he and his cronies just can't help themselves and when elected start the scams, the lies and doing illegal things which leaves them wide open. 

 

To suggest PTP will or have changed is naive at best. Same owner, same bottle, same old vinegar wine.

 

 

As well as coming up with a great deal of nonsense, your answer also reveals the paranoia and illogicality about Thaksin that's very common in the Thai urban middle class.As Joshua Kurlantzick put it:

 

"Puea Thai, a populist anti-junta party, appears to have won the most constituency seats in the lower house, and the anti-junta parties collectively won the largest share of the popular vote. In a system with a truly elected senate, fairer election laws or a better climate for political activism, they would have had the first chance to form a government and pick a prime minister."

 

 

1. The PTP vote was certainly less than expected but with allies, they still have a chance of forming a government. Hardly a party on the way out 

 

2. More importantly, the sham election and the rigged constitution was prepared by the Junta on the basis PTP must be weakened.

 

3. Why would Thaksin want to stage a coup? He achieved power legitimately.

 

4. I agree with the idiocy of the proposed umbrella amnesty. But as you say the reasonable protests were soon hijacked by Suthep and his thugs.

 

5. I cannot really follow the logic that poor PTP practices undermine the case for more liberal democracy. With a better opposition, the PTP could have been voted out.

 

6. But your greatest mistake is to believe that Thaksin and the Junta are but two sides of the same coin. I think you overestimate Thaksin's astuteness by the way.

Edited by jayboy
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8 hours ago, BestB said:

Enemy of my enemy is my friend 

Enemy of my enemy is my friend's enemy which will make it challenging for Thaksin's return ... :whistling:

Edited by ttrd
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8 hours ago, FarangDoingHisThing69 said:

Surprised to see FFP hitching up to the old order.


Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect

Pheu Thai are not the old order.  They also originally were formed to unseat the real old order who are still a sort of coalition force to be reckoned with independent of the election. Who do you think is in the box seat to get the 250 special Senate seats under the new constitution?  And who will be appointing them? 

Edited by The Deerhunter
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10 minutes ago, JAG said:

If such a coalition manages to form a government you can expect two things I suggest.

 

1 - A coup will remove it within (probably less than) a year, because the political and economic establishment to which the military are beholden are implacably opposed to the Thai people selecting their own government.

 

2 - A number of commentators on this forum, we may call them the "usual suspects" will leap to the defence of, and enthusiastically justify, such a coup. Despite their claims to support democracy, they too are implacably opposed to the Thai people selecting their own government

According to the published result, this coalition can indeed count on a majority in the lower house, this effectively ends Palang Pracharath Party search for such a coalition, also because it is quite clearly not their place to even start forming this coalition, the party with the most seats has that right. 

 

So with this out of the way, it will be very interesting to see if Prayuth will indeed overplay his hand and somehow block this coalition through the senate. If legitimacy was his ultimate goal, he cannot possibly block this coalition. It must be sad that despite all the measures put in place (including dissolvement of a major party aligned to Thaksin) he still didn't manage to get a simple majority in the lower house. 

 

If he does block this coalition using the senate, he would indeed have more than enough senators to become PM, but to what purpose, those senators might be able to help him to become a PM, they will not be able to help him pass laws in the lower house, with a 255 MP majority in the lower house, he could and probably will be rendered teethless. 

 

And no article 44 can come to the rescue. 

Edited by sjaak327
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7 minutes ago, sjaak327 said:

 

If he does block this coalition using the senate, he would indeed have more than enough senators to become PM, but to what purpose, those senators might be able to help him to become a PM, they will not be able to help him pass laws in the lower house, with a 255 MP majority in the lower house, he could and probably will be rendered teethless. 

At which point, I suspect, Article 44 will be reintroduced in some form or another.

 

I don't think that he will be able to resist the temptation to use the senate to put himself into power. Once in power he will be a unable to resist a mechanism to allow him to have his own way. And so the clown car will continue to trundle along, until that point (near or distant) when there is a loud bang and the wheels fall off...

Edited by JAG
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2 minutes ago, JAG said:

At which point, I suspect, Article 44 will be reintroduced in some form or another.

 

I don't think that he will be able to resist the temptation to use the senate to put himself into power. Once in power he will be a unable to resist a mechanism to allow him to have his own way. And so the clown car will continue to trundle along, until that point (near or distant) when there is a loud bang and the wheels fall off...

He might, then again he might simply call it a day. He still has the senate and the 20 year road map at his disposal. Plenty of influence in any case. 

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30 minutes ago, JAG said:

At which point, I suspect, Article 44 will be reintroduced in some form or another.

 

I don't think that he will be able to resist the temptation to use the senate to put himself into power. Once in power he will be a unable to resist a mechanism to allow him to have his own way. And so the clown car will continue to trundle along, until that point (near or distant) when there is a loud bang and the wheels fall off...

The loud bang might happen sooner than later and this time it mightn't be all roses and flowers as the election has demonstrated there are a lot of people against the junta lead team and this team needs to tread very gently. 

Edited by Artisi
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18 hours ago, canuckamuck said:

So there will be an antijunta government and Prayut will be the Prime Minister?  It seems like Prayut's vision of creating Thai style democracy is coming true. Nowhere else in the world would you find a specimen such as this.

Yes Prayut knew his party wouldn't win, but having changed the constitution which is stacked in his favour, i.e. guaranteeing 250 seats and the fact that the other parties need xyz to elect a PM, he knows he is in, and of course if he doesn't like how things are travelling, one call to his military mates and we have a coup once again, 13 is an unlucky number I am told, could that coup if it happens be the mother of all coups with the uprising that will split the country ?

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2 hours ago, TKDfella said:

I read this morning that a junta spokesman has advised (or warned) parties to avoid causing conflict. Writing on the wall?

 

 

Yes, a shot across the bows. If the Pheua Thai coalition develops momentum, it will be sabotaged before Parliament is convened with the assistance of the Junta's pliant Constitutional Court and Electoral Commission. It may be through the dissolution of Fast Forward or even Pheua Thai, or it may be just the distribution of cash to waverers. Whatever the method it just won't be allowed to happen because, in the eyes of the creeps involved, it would mean the coup was wasted.

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15 minutes ago, jayboy said:

 

 

Yes, a shot across the bows. If the Pheua Thai coalition develops momentum, it will be sabotaged before Parliament is convened with the assistance of the Junta's pliant Constitutional Court and Electoral Commission. It may be through the dissolution of Fast Forward or even Pheua Thai, or it may be just the distribution of cash to waverers. Whatever the method it just won't be allowed to happen because, in the eyes of the creeps involved, it would mean the coup was wasted.

For the life of me I cannot see how all this will not end in violence.

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2 hours ago, GarryP said:

Red shirts are so passe. Orange is the new red.

By orange you meant the young student activists and their likes; I agree. Like 1992. The Reds and Yellows are out of the game, disunited, demoralized and leaderless.   

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42 minutes ago, jayboy said:

Whatever the method it just won't be allowed to happen because, in the eyes of the creeps involved, it would mean the coup was wasted.

 

That, plus there is so much accumulated dirty junta laundry that they simply cannot let anyone else at the helm. Someone might start digging and asking too many questions.. despite the smell telling the obvious already. 

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35 minutes ago, Khaeng Mak said:

For the life of me I cannot see how all this will not end in violence.

Who knows? I don't detect much other than resignation at the moment.

 

One point not much commented on is that Korn Chatikavanij one of the leading Democrats has explicitly ruled out working with Pheua Thai (and by inference being willing to work with Palang Pracharat). That means there could never be a united anti-army rule coalition which the dinosaurs couldn't easily subvert.

 

It's difficult to overestimate the significance of this point. Most Thai politicians - whether in or out of uniform - unpleasant, self-serving and corrupt. Korn (and a few others) are different - independently wealthy, highly competent, very well educated, knowledgeable about the world, personable and in short a decent man. Unlike most feral politicians, he KNOWS what is the decent thing to do - yet he does the opposite. What can explain it?  Tribalism and class solidarity I suppose, never to be underestimated in politics.

 

Of course, it's completely understandable why Korn recoils at the prospect of working with Pheua Thai - but politics is about compromise, and the opposite is so much worse. Maybe he should have a word with Nick Clegg. Joking apart someone like Korn on the inside could monitor and crack down on any PTP skullduggery 

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44 minutes ago, jayboy said:

Of course, it's completely understandable why Korn recoils at the prospect of working with Pheua Thai - but politics is about compromise, and the opposite is so much worse

There is now calls from the Dem supporters for the executives to step down. The executives like Korn have been making the decisions on party direction for the last decade and have only brought dismal results. The call is to allow the MPs who won seats and accountable to their people to have a voice in the party’s policies and direction. Things may go fairly ambiguous in supporting Prayut. Some MPs call for non alliance to all parties and stay as opposition in Parliament. This not good news for Prayut if that happen. 

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