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OPINION: Thailand’s people have spoken. Will its military listen?


webfact

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This op-ed will be paraded about here by the ultra-nationalists, in the coming days, as "proof" of America interfering in Thai politics.

 

But it's nothing that hasn't been said here, and in some Thai outlets.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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4 hours ago, webfact said:

But the generals and their conservative royalist allies don’t seem to have gotten the message. Or, more likely, they got it loud and clear but are once again choosing to put their own desire to cling to power over the will of the majority of Thais

They got the message all right, but it's not in their playbook or best interests.

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4 hours ago, webfact said:

The new constitution, drafted by the junta and adopted in 2017, was written specifically to preserve the military’s sway over any future elected government and prevent any real reformer such as Mr. Pita from coming to power. 

Forced in 2017

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I beg to differ with one point that the Washington Post wrote.

 

"(They) are once again choosing to put their own desire to cling to power over the will of the majority of Thais."

 

I believe they will make way for an elected government but want that government to be right wing not liberal.

 

Depends how you interpret "cling to power". I think they realize they are out. More likely they want a government that sticks to the accepted manner of government: big budget for the military, no touching the highest institution, a disciplined society obeying the whims of the elite and so on.

 

If history is anything to go by, political parties will once again squabble and the military will once again take over. It takes a smarter party than Move Forward to manage Thailand. But one hopes for the best. 

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This Senate construction in the constitution has, beside others, the nasty disadvantage that it has been made almost impossible for changes to be made to this construction at all, without a majority approval of the Senate. The fox has been made the guardian of the chicken coop and that cannot be changed in the future.

Edited by tomacht8
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They need to reign in the power of the military.

 

There's already talk of ending conscription which would be a good start.

 

The only reason they need an army is to suppress the will of the people.

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Good article that sums up the situation very succinctly for those that aren't aware of what's going on  in the world of Thai politics.

 

Old new for AseanNow readers of course, but that's not who this article is aimed at.

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From the Washington Post article and pretty much sums up the state of play:

 

'Mr. Pita’s first big hurdle to the top post is an unfairly skewed system for choosing a prime minister. The new constitution, drafted by the junta and adopted in 2017, was written specifically to preserve the military’s sway over any future elected government and prevent any real reformer such as Mr. Pita from coming to power. It stipulates that the prime minister be chosen not by the 500 members of parliament elected in May, but instead be jointly named by parliament and the 250-member appointed senate. All the senators owe their jobs to the ruling junta, and presumably remain beholden to the military'

 

and this....

 

'This is a crucial time for Thailand. The country’s military rulers need to know that the world, including the United States, is watching. The only democratic way forward is for the generals to step aside and let the clear winner of the May election form the next government'

Edited by mark131v
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