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Constitutional Court Sacks Thai PM Over Ethics Breach

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3 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

She and her dad are now disliked, disrespected, dishonored and disavowed. They are pariahs. Which is a great thing. They richly deserve that. 

Spidermike your comment surprises me, so you will be happy with Anutin??

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9 hours ago, kwilco said:

absolute nonsense - your first comment about "right decision" is an oxymoron and how do you consider her statement to be "dishonest?

Exactly correct, the whole thing is a sham but remember where we are!!!

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20 hours ago, Will B Good said:

 

Is she still a minister, an MP?

 

Should she not be sacked from those and banned from politics now?

Not sure she was ever elected. I believe she got the job on the back of her father’s coattails. You never know who you’re voting for in Thailand until after you’ve cast your vote. 

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Of course it is a sham. Forget all the stuff about the telephone conversation, which was simply the result of her incompetence. How on earth can a 38 year old, with a degree in Political Science from Chulalongkorn University where they are not allowed to discuss Thai politics, and a Masters Degree in Intenational Hospitality from the University of Essex, no relevant experience of any form, never held a real job, and only joined a political party in 2021 become a Prime Minister? That is just as much an indication of a Banana Republic as anything the Constitutional Court may have done.

20 hours ago, Kinnock said:

Well that's cleared the way for Anutin, as planned.

He wouldn’t be the first convicted criminal to get the top job. Seems like it’s becoming quite the worldwide phenomenon. 

Not just this dumb puppet. The entire Shinawatra clan should go. And, as much as I don't like Hun Sen, I have to say "thank you sir". 

Now that that Constitutional Court has followed the instructions of the ultra conservative elite, it only remains to see who the ultra conservative elite have blessed as the next PM.

 

Most likely, who ever the choice is, more damage has been, and will be, done to Thailand's international reputation.  I await the discussions in the international media in coming days.

19 hours ago, John Drake said:

Prayuth was better. Bring him back.

Prayut did nothing for the Thai people, nothing for education nor wages.  Thailand was stagnant under Prayut for a decade and only the military and elite prospered.

14 minutes ago, JimHuaHin said:

Now that that Constitutional Court has followed the instructions of the ultra conservative elite, it only remains to see who the ultra conservative elite have blessed as the next PM.

 

Most likely, who ever the choice is, more damage has been, and will be, done to Thailand's international reputation.  I await the discussions in the international media in coming days.

 

Sadly.........same snouts and trotters at the trough whatever happens.

The latest in Thai politics: Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra was sacked by Thailand’s Constitutional Court on August 29, 2025, due to an ethics violation. The Court ruled 6-3 that she breached ethical standards in a leaked phone call with Cambodia’s former Prime Minister Hun Sen amid a June border dispute. In the call, Paetongtarn referred to Hun Sen as "uncle" and criticized a Thai army commander, which was seen as jeopardizing national interests and lacking honesty and integrity. This conversation was viewed by the court as a serious misconduct that justified her removal from office. Her cabinet was also dismissed, and the coalition continues in caretaker mode until a new prime minister is chosen by Parliament. The main candidate is 77-year-old Chaikem Niri from Pheu Thai party, though other contenders remain, such as Deputy Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who resigned from his coalition party, and former PM Prayuth Chan-ocha.

40 minutes ago, Zack61 said:

He wouldn’t be the first convicted criminal to get the top job. Seems like it’s becoming quite the worldwide phenomenon. 

what is he convicted for?

You all can just talk but unable to do something good for Thailand. Go and help build a great nation, not destroy it. So now watch out for what you have all gained and wished for.

58 minutes ago, paul1804 said:

Spidermike your comment surprises me, so you will be happy with Anutin??

No I absolutely despise Anutin and the destruction that he's wreaked upon this nation during the decade that the army had control. Thailand still has not recovered from that debacle in my opinion. 

 

Like a lot of other progressive people, I would love to see somebody like Pita, a young dynamic leader, but there are some very toxic forces here that seem to be preventing that from happening, and they seem to have very low regard for the majority of the population here. 

2 minutes ago, edramoso said:

You all can just talk but unable to do something good for Thailand. Go and help build a great nation, not destroy it. So now watch out for what you have all gained and wished for.

 

 

Anyone?

49 minutes ago, Zack61 said:

He wouldn’t be the first convicted criminal to get the top job. Seems like it’s becoming quite the worldwide phenomenon. 

Another misinformed poster   

5 minutes ago, spidermike007 said:

No I absolutely despise Anutin and the destruction that he's wreaked upon this nation during the decade that the army had control. Thailand still has not recovered from that debacle in my opinion. 

 

Like a lot of other progressive people, I would love to see somebody like Pita, a young dynamic leader, but there are some very toxic forces here that seem to be preventing that from happening, and they seem to have very low regard for the majority of the population here. 

so what is new !!! 

Word on the street up here in the north is that Anutin will be PM for about four months, and then they'll call a general election. Sounds possible, but Anutin's comments about "dirty farangs" don't inspire confidence. 

If another of the Shin clan is elected to parliament, will a revolving door or a trapdoor be installed for the quick getaway :wai:

3 minutes ago, b17 said:

Word on the street up here in the north is that Anutin will be PM for about four months, and then they'll call a general election. Sounds possible, but Anutin's comments about "dirty farangs" don't inspire confidence. 

 

 

He's claiming lots of support...could be lying of course......but I'd be surprised (not happy) if he doesn't become PM.

 

 

2 minutes ago, Grumpy one said:

If another of the Shin clan is elected to parliament, will a revolving door or a trapdoor be installed for the quick getaway :wai:

 

 

Who is left.......

Screenshot 2025-08-30 at 13.55.02.png

21 hours ago, Will B Good said:

 

 

 

Wow.....was not expecting that!

 

Anyone seen any tanks rolling into BKK?

she's out, no need for the tanks.

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Just now, Will B Good said:

 

 

Are there any left?

There must be a cousin or buffalo ready to jump in :whistling:

21 hours ago, anchadian said:

Who will be the next PM?

Prawit & Anutin are sorting it out already

20 hours ago, kwilco said:

It's about time Thailand dropped this kind of pseudo-legal activity - every time the military or powrs that be don't like a politician they end up in v=court - this is NOT how it works in a proper democracy

It's not just Thailand. USA, UK.....

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21 hours ago, webfact said:

The court found her guilty of an ethics violation

On the other hand the Constitutional Court never found Junta Leader Gen. Prayut's military overthrow of an elected government in 2014 to be unconstitutional, much less an ethics violation. To clarify, the Court never received a complaint to even review the legality of the overthrow. 

You know, to Minister Paetongtarn, I still would... But the problem being that I wouldn't be able to shake the resemblance of Thaksin 

14 minutes ago, Homburg said:

It's not just Thailand. USA, UK.....

YJose countries have serious problems but saying "just like" is not helpful to understanding the situation in Thailand which has been running since WW2. To undersand the situation today, it helps to understand the history and how we got here.

21 hours ago, dutch boy said:

Oh God, lets hope not. That would be the worst possible outcome for Thailand. At least Thaksin has a brain, not so with the corrupt Anutin. Thailand lost it credibility once again with its constant shuffling of Prime Ministers. Its no wonder Thailand is a third world country and its economy failing. 

 

It will be Anutin so that they can put Thaksin to be lol.  However PP have said they will support him but not join his coalition leaving him a lame duck so tht he has to abide by what they want.

 

The election will be called soon as the elite ar int eh best position they can be.  people are thinking about the great military.  Thaksin is at an all time low and the PP is still strong but more mellowed.

20 hours ago, kwilco said:

This crisis has left the country leaderless. Once again, Thailand is facing a deep political crisis, with the dismissal of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra following a leaked conversation in which she expressed a desire to de-escalate hostilities with Cambodia while blaming the military for instigating tensions. The controversy is less about what she said than about the institutions that acted against her.


For nearly two decades, Thailand’s Constitutional Court has been one of the most powerful political actors in the country. It has repeatedly dissolved parties and removed prime ministers on narrow legal or technical grounds, often at odds with the expressed will of voters. Since 2006, it has dismantled or banned multiple political movements, including Future Forward in 2020, and most recently the reformist Move Forward Party in August 2024 — despite that party’s sweeping electoral mandate, larger even than Thaksin Shinawatra’s victories in the past. Four prime ministers have also been ousted through court rulings, reinforcing the perception that the judiciary serves as an instrument of the military.

 

The Thai military has long been hostile to any political movement associated with reform or  Thaksin Shinawatra, yet large portions of the electorate continue to support his family and allies. Paetongtarn’s leaked remarks criticizing the army provided the pretext for action, and the military establishment — through its influence over the courts and media — ensured her removal. Thailand’s media landscape is dominated by military interests, e.g. TV stations, and more than 200,000 websites are censored under strict lese-majesté laws.
Formally, members of the Constitutional Court are appointed by the King on the advice of the Senate. While the 2024 reform replaced the fully military-appointed Senate with a new 200-member chamber drawn from vocational groups, the body still remains heavily influenced by individuals with close military ties.

 

This latest ruling leaves Thailand without a functioning government and gives the army broad freedom to shape both domestic governance and foreign policy — including escalating tensions with Cambodia, another ASEAN member. With the economy already stagnating and tourism (12–20% of GDP) vulnerable to instability, the implications are severe.

 

Thailand’s repeated cycle is well known: an elected government gains popular support, only to be removed by military or judicial intervention. The country now faces the prospect of another period of military dominance, followed eventually by elections whose outcomes may again be overturned. For ASEAN, this is not just a domestic Thai issue but a regional concern, as instability threatens both cross-border relations and economic confidence.
 

 

 

For those of you who in this moment of a complex political crisis think that a "thumbs down" icon is in anyway a valid comment - be aware it is the equivalent of a digital grunt, an icon of mindlessness. the dumbest comment on the thread. THere is no "constitutional court" in th UK for a start.

Same old story. Power struggle between the elites and the rest of the country at the expense of the people.

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