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Posted
13 hours ago, dinsdale said:

This woman is a microcosm of a plethora of PTP supporters who will not forget that Thaksin is a self-serving traitor of their support. PTP will pay dearly at the next election for his treacherous move of jumping into bed with the enemy. 

One hopes, 

Posted
12 hours ago, Hunz Kittisak said:

As long as they support PT

Thaksin’s legacy lives on 

If they are true supporters they will see that Khun Thaksin is playing the long game. Get back by all means then wrest control and lastly purge the military dinosaurs. 
 

I rather think it was part of the deal for his prison free return with pardon which is why the new investigation into the prison hospital affair will be white washed away.

Posted
16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Screenshot-2024-10-02-140416.png

 

Once a die-hard fan of former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a 60 year old Thai woman went as far as travelling from Thailand to the UAE just to see her political hero during his self-imposed exile.

 

Armed with gifts, letters, and a banner, Podjanin Towatrakool wept upon meeting Thaksin in 2009, hugging him and calling him “father.” She even covered her house walls with pictures of the billionaire and composed songs in his honour.

 

Fast forward to 2024, and Podjanin’s admiration has crumbled. Thaksin’s political comeback, via a contentious deal that saw his Pheu Thai Party ditch the election-winning now-defunct Move Forward Party (MFP) to join forces with conservative factions, was the breaking point.

 

“I am willing to meet Thaksin in private but I don’t want to be seen in public as a supporter.”

 

Podjanin declared her allegiance to the orange-clad Progressive People’s Party, a reincarnation of the MFP.

 

Podjanin is not alone. Many red-shirt supporters, once loyal to Thaksin, have turned their backs on him, disillusioned by his alliance with pro-military factions. Political scientist Titipol Phakdeewanich noted the shift.


 

“We cannot associate all red shirts with the Thaksin fan club. Now, a large number of them support the (former) MFP.”

 

This split between red-shirt factions is echoed by Tida Tawornseth, former chairperson of a red-shirt network.

 

“There are two kinds of red shirts now. The first are loyal to Thaksin. The second stick to their ideology.”

 

As Pheu Thai faces declining support, particularly in its northern heartland, the Progressive People’s Party is gathering steam, with many hoping for real change in Thailand’s deeply entrenched political system. But for some, like farmer Sonfan Patoompon, Thaksin remains a hero.

 

She scoffs at the younger generation’s calls for change, confident in her unwavering loyalty to Pheu Thai’s promises, reported The Nation.

 

By Puntid Tantivangphaisal

Photo courtesy of The Nation

 

Source: The Thaiger

-- 2024-10-02

 

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Tida, thought she was in jail. 

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