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Constitutional Court Already Turned Into ‘Superpower’ Agency: Academic


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THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT has practically become a “superpower” agency which could put an end to policies and resolutions made by those in the legislative branch and hand them severe penalties, according to a noted academic.

 

Munin Pongsapan, a former dean of Thammasat University’s Faculty of Law, commented the Constitutional Court had been practically turned into a “superpower” agency empowered by the junta-designed constitution of 2017 to deliver draconian penalties to parties in the legislative branch at any given time.

 

That the Constitution Court’s ruling delivered yesterday (Jan.31) to prohibit the Move Forward from proceeding with attempted amendment to the lese majeste law, better known as Section 112 of the Criminal Code, unambiguously underlined the independent, judicial agency’s superseding power over pro-amendment moves of the progressive party which constitutes part of the legislative branch, Munin said.

 

According to the Thammasat academic, the Constitutional Court has unduly overpowered the legislative branch though the judges were basically designed to keep the judicial branch in check and balance with the legislative or executive branch.

 

By Thai Newsroom Reporters

Representative images of the Constitutional Court. Credit: Matichon

 

Full story: THAI NEWSROOM 2024-02-02

 

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2 hours ago, lordgrinz said:

 

If there is any justice in the world, he will come back in his next life as a dung beetle.

Dung beetles serve a very usefull existence. Maybe perpetual reincarnation as the dung itself.

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There are so many problems with this (Constitutional/Charter) court, and others.

 

little/no oversight

 

the public has no involvement in the selection of judges

 

there is no visibility/transparency on the mechanisms of this court

 

the court routinely threatens the public that they cannot question or criticize the court or its decisions

 

opinions/decisions/dissents are not made public

 

 

Marsupial comes to mind.

 

 

 

 

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That was the whole point of the Constitution, as rewritten. Did Munin not understand that at the time and speak out then? Why is everybody now pretending to be surprised by this? Does everyone really have such a shallow understanding of the established power dynamics here?

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11 hours ago, flyingtlger said:

Prayuth can't stop laughing....

 

image.png.3681346666b50dfcc216f19473cf89f1.png

The strategy from the start. 

.....and seems to still be working for them, regardless of surface and faux democratic systems. 

 

Actually, these underlying practices were in place long long long before Prayuth. 

History is usually hidden.

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8 hours ago, ikke1959 said:

It is the voice of the ones really in charge of the country...

I agree but ones is plural. I think if we go singular we find who is really in power and directing everything. The only thing this will achieve is increase the disaffection against that power.

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4 hours ago, Purdey said:

I don't know if I understand this correctly, but why do people think the court should be elected by the people or do what the people wants?

The constitution and the laws of the land inform the court what can be done or not done. If the constitution contains clauses protecting any institution, that is what the court must follow. I don't see they can choose to ignore or change the constitution at the beck and call of "the people" . Perhaps the court can interpret, to clarify something, but it would be duty bound to follow the law wouldn't it?

Perhaps the fault is with the writers of the constitution, but a new government would still have to be cautious of breaking the current law while trying to rewrite it. 

The so-called constitution was written to protect the powers of the elite.

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8 hours ago, bamnutsak said:

There are so many problems with this (Constitutional/Charter) court, and others.

 

little/no oversight

 

the public has no involvement in the selection of judges

 

there is no visibility/transparency on the mechanisms of this court

 

the court routinely threatens the public that they cannot question or criticize the court or its decisions

 

opinions/decisions/dissents are not made public

 

 

Marsupial comes to mind.

 

 

 

 

Kangaroo court?

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19 hours ago, Purdey said:

I don't know if I understand this correctly, but why do people think the court should be elected by the people or do what the people wants?

The constitution and the laws of the land inform the court what can be done or not done. If the constitution contains clauses protecting any institution, that is what the court must follow. I don't see they can choose to ignore or change the constitution at the beck and call of "the people" . Perhaps the court can interpret, to clarify something, but it would be duty bound to follow the law wouldn't it?

Perhaps the fault is with the writers of the constitution, but a new government would still have to be cautious of breaking the current law while trying to rewrite it. 

 

No, people are enraged because it is only the parliament & government of the day who are legally allowed to propose changes to laws, rewrite constitutions and propose amendments. The court should have no business deciding what changes to the constitution can or cannot be proposed by legally elected representatives of parliament, or those standing for representation of the people. Amendments to constitutions are typical of most democracies around the world.

 

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If anyone only steps 1mm in direction to the articel 112 of the criminal code the "Constitutional Court" wakes up, considering only the letters of §§'s, but not the content. They don't act as a 3rd power in a state/democracy. They should be sent to London to learn what a "royal democracy" means. There are more states in Europe with the same (good) system.

 

Why does the CC not do the same with coup meakers, some parties etc? The list goes on. They are only concentrated on MFP and their "dangerous" members. Afraid of the future!

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