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New PM to be nominated on Wednesday


snoop1130

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4 hours ago, Jip99 said:

What evidence do you have to confirm that Thailand has moved backwards.

Ignorance is not bliss. Thailand has declined to be top the world in terms of income inequality. Overtaken Russia and Indian in last few years. 

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MPs, senators to vote for a new prime minister on June 5

By KAS CHANWANPEN 
THE NATION WEEKEND

 

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AFTER speakers of the House of Representatives were royally endorsed on Friday, new House Speaker Chuan Leekpai said the election for the next premier would be held on Wednesday.

 

The date was selected as soon as the Royal Gazette published the endorsement of Chuan as House speaker and Suchart  Tancharoen and Supachai Phosu as his deputies.

 

Though the Constitution does not set a deadline for the election of the head of government, it determines that parliamentarians must be notified at least three days in advance unless there is an emergency. 

 

Chuan said notification letters would be sent to MPs on Saturday and both the Senate and House of Representatives would be involved in the voting. 

 

Since construction of a new Parliament building has yet to be completed, the lawmakers will meet at the TOT auditorium in Bangkok’s Lak Si district. 

 

Only nominees of parties that won at least 25 MP seats in the March 24 election will be eligible for consideration on Wednesday. 

 

The premier’s election will be by open ballot. Each candidate’s name will be read aloud in alphabetical order and voters will indicate their assent or disapproval or choose to abstain. 

 

The winner of a simple majority of 376 votes from among the 750 members of both houses will become prime minister. If no one wins a simple majority, the Constitution requires further votes until someone emerges victorious. 

 

Junta chief General Prayut Chan-o-cha is the sole candidate of the Phalang Pracharat Party, which has 116 MP seats and is striving to lead a ruling coalition. 

 

The Pheu Thai Party, which has 136 MPs, has nominated Khunying Sudarat Keyuraphan, Chadchart Sittipunt and Chaikasem Nitisiri for the top job. It remains still unclear which one will be fielded on Wednesday.

 

Other candidates contesting Wednesday’s vote could include Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit. Though his parliamentary duties have been suspended by the Constitutional Court due to his media-shares case, his party insists the 41-year-old is qualified for the premier’s post. 

 

Meanwhile, neither the pro- nor anti-junta bloc has been able to muster enough MPs to form a coalition in the more than 60 days since the March 24 polls. It is believed the government will be formed once a prime minister is chosen. 

 

Though the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party is expected to take the lead in a multiparty coalition, it has not been able to confirm arrangements with its key partner, the Democrat Party, due to disagreements over who holds the Agriculture portfolio. 

 

Former agriculture minister Somsak Thepsutin announced yesterday that he would fight for the position, saying agricultural policies had been the core of his election campaign and he needs to deliver on what he promised.

 

Democrat leader Jurin Laksanawisit said his party was waiting for Phalang Pracharat to sort out its internal issues before they meet to decide what other parties should join the Phalang Pracharat-led coalition.

 

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-- © Copyright The Nation 2019-06-01
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44 minutes ago, rooster59 said:

The premier’s election will be by open ballot. Each candidate’s name will be read aloud in alphabetical order and voters will indicate their assent or disapproval or choose to abstain. 

'will be' - OK, going the result of the last 'election' - who's won this one already?

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In the USA, democracy means... literally anyone, anyone (current situation serves to prove) can become President, but in Thailand’s democracy it seems only one specific man can become Prime Minister.

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14 hours ago, thaiguzzi said:

I have always never understood any foreigner or expat with a Western education who can support the Amart, the Elite, the Junta or the Yellow Shirt movement and all it represents and stands for.

I just can't fathom it.

As for your "more projects, more infrastructure, more weapons" - have you ever thought of the word accountability and any Thai academic, politician, anybody asked to see the books and invoices?

And no, i don't want to move, but i have every right to moan about these scumbag parasites.

It is rather strange to see expats supporting an ultra conservative regime. Such governments are usually against immigration, and make visa rules tougher. Not that we've seen this happen in Thailand, of course. 

 

I've come to the conclusion that all I want is peace and stability, so the status quo will do - I even voted for it.

 

The western world likes to lecture Thailand on how perfect their 'democratic' societies are, which sounds hypocritical to say the least.

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14 hours ago, Bipolar said:

Gawd, anyone as long as its not some old stupid and illiterate, bad tempered and ill-mannered dinosaur who likes to compose and sing old stupid songs and cannot speak English!

So that rules out quite a few forum members!!

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2 hours ago, d2b2 said:

In the USA, democracy means... literally anyone, anyone (current situation serves to prove) can become President

 

Edited by Wiggy
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1 hour ago, d2b2 said:

Oh yes please. An unaccountable, unelected, forced leadership at gun point and a constitution so riddled with bias and cheating is far better than the West's silly democracy. Why we are so good at constitution writing in Thailand... we make a new one weekly. I voted for it, but too hard to read it first.

I'll take authoritarian dictatorship over democracy... as long as they make me feel I am superior to those other pesky voters who kept winning elections. Democracy only works if it goes the way I like. Please  remove my elected government and restrict my liberties. I can't be trusted to think for myself. Mommy can I play on the phone now? 

 

I used to spend hours futilely writing posts just like yours, until I realised that Thailand is better the way it is. I'd rather strong leadership than riots any day, and I have the freedom to live in peace.

 

Taking a look at the doomed societies of the western world - the miserable,  wretched and isolated decay of what was once good - only reinforces my change of mind. 

 

The liberal left virtue signalling viewpoint that dominates the west tries to make Thailand like itself. Good for Thailand for thumbing its nose at unwanted interference.

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18 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

the nomination of the prime minister will take place on Wednesday.

I thought we had a stalemate at the moment with two parties yet to announce their allegiance?

Maybe I missed something.

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8 minutes ago, dbrenn said:

I used to spend hours futilely writing posts just like yours, until I realised that Thailand is better the way it is. I'd rather strong leadership than riots any day, and I have the freedom to live in peace.

 

Taking a look at the doomed societies of the western world - the miserable,  wretched and isolated decay of what was once good - only reinforces my change of mind. 

 

The liberal left virtue signalling viewpoint that dominates the west tries to make Thailand like itself. Good for Thailand for thumbing its nose at unwanted interference.

74.68% of the voting adults came out to vote. Doesn’t that tell you what the Thais want?

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5 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

74.68% of the voting adults came out to vote. Doesn’t that tell you what the Thais want?

Voting is compulsory in Thailand, and even if it weren't I still don't see the point you are making. Voter turnout shows that people are voting, but not whom they are voting for. 

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2 hours ago, peter14 said:

Already book outbound  ticket... everything falling apart in Thailand anyway...

Good bye! "everything falling apart in Thailand anyway..."?? You obviously do not monitor the X-Rates. Much to most of our (USD, GBP, Canada, Euro, AUD etc. etc.) economic demise the THB just keeps going from strength to strength and has been doing so for years. Pre and post coup.

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16 minutes ago, bdenner said:

Good bye! "everything falling apart in Thailand anyway..."?? You obviously do not monitor the X-Rates. Much to most of our (USD, GBP, Canada, Euro, AUD etc. etc.) economic demise the THB just keeps going from strength to strength and has been doing so for years. Pre and post coup.

Very true. Most of these people who threaten to leave want to come back again, after a few months of failing to fit in to the utopian places that they run away to. That, or they end up in crushing dead end jobs, zero hour contracts. or on benefits. 

Edited by dbrenn
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2 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

You do know that compulsory voting is not strictly enforced. 74.68% of voters which is a high turnout tell us that majority of Thais do not like the current situation and want change. Besides if most Thais like the way it is as you said, the pro junta PPRP should have won with a majority. 

The flaw in your logic is to suggest that a high voter turnout means that voters must want change. Voters turning out in droves can just as readily vote for the status quo as an alternative to proposed change. 

 

Change isn't necessarily a good thing anyway. Look again at the degeneration of the doomed societies in the western world. Once great and wealthy civilisations have been laid to waste and bankrupted by their own citizenry - all in the name of change. 

 

Hats off to Thailand for opposing the kind of change that has blighted the places where we came from. 

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