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Three major parties say no to non-elected prime minister


Lite Beer

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Three major parties say no to non-elected prime minister

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BANGKOK: -- Three major political parties are unanimous in their opposition to the draft constitution proposed by the Constitution Drafting Committee which which states that the next prime minister needs not be an elected representative.

Mr Wirat Kalayasiri, chief legal advisor of the Democrat party, said Friday that, as a matter of principle, the prime minister who is to be chosen by the parliament must be an elected representative but with an exception that if there is a national crisis that an elected representative cannot be chosen for the premiership then there should be a leeway to allow an outsider to become prime minister.

Drafting the charter in such a way to open the door for an outsider to be appointed the prime minister will pave the way for money barons to dominate politics, said Mr Wirat.

Mr Somsak Prisanananthakul, advisor to Chart Thai Pattana party leader, said that having an outsider as prime minister should be an exception in case there is a national crisis that makes it impossible for an elected representative to be appointed prime minister.

Former prime minister Somchai Wongsawat of Pheu Thai party said having an outsider as prime minister represents a step backward. He said that political development in this country has already advanced to the stage that the prime minister should be an elected representative as stipulated in the 1997 charter.

Source: http://englishnews.thaipbs.or.th/three-major-parties-say-no-to-non-elected-prime-minister

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-- Thai PBS 2015-02-27

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Drafting the charter in such a way to open the door for an outsider to be appointed the prime minister will pave the way for money barons to dominate politics, said Mr Wirat.

He says this like it's never happened before under the old rules rolleyes.gif

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While we are at it, how about making the rule that the PM must be truly elected, by an electorate and not by the party list. Then all candidates can be publicly scrutinised, which would be far better than getting some party hack, or a billionaire megalomaniac who buys his way to power.

All MP's are truly elected and therefore subject to scrutiny. This is the parliamentary system.

BS. Anybody who has enough money can pay popular politicians to join his party and be elected via the party list WITHOUT going to the people who live near him and explaining his past actions, his source of wealth, or anything else.

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While we are at it, how about making the rule that the PM must be truly elected, by an electorate and not by the party list. Then all candidates can be publicly scrutinised, which would be far better than getting some party hack, or a billionaire megalomaniac who buys his way to power.

All MP's are truly elected and therefore subject to scrutiny. This is the parliamentary system.

BS. Anybody who has enough money can pay popular politicians to join his party and be elected via the party list WITHOUT going to the people who live near him and explaining his past actions, his source of wealth, or anything else.

Once their name is known they're wide open to all scrutiny.

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It would appear that they are now getting into the realm of trying to fix things that aint broke what with MMP and unelected PM.

All that was needed is to make sure nobody with convictions or bans for electoral fraud or corruption could ever get near parliament or the senate and strengthen the checks and balances so they couldn't be subverted as in the past.

Getting a clean parliament and senate under the previous method should be the priority.

Although I don't agree with the list MP thing after seeing it in action in both NZ and Thailand.

All MP's should be elected from a constituency by the people and be answerable to their electorate, list MP's are only answerable to the party and are a way of getting people, often those who are owed something, who could never be elected into parliament.

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The potential for an unelected dynasty to emerge just for a change instead of the Shin's elected version.

Simple, get or grab power then hand onto a relative or chosen sycophant.

Keep reassuring the public everything is done for their own good. of course.

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I think they are trying to deal with the issue that surfaced last year when PTP stood down but remained including Thaksins representative YL, but it is not the correct solution

When a government is removed or steps down then I believe the Mantle should be handed to the Senate to invoke emergency powers and put in place an emergency Cabinet to run things until such time as an election can be arranged - rules must be applied to such a Cabinet that limit powers and length of term - there is also no need for any of them to be elected, this would have completely removed PTP but would not have solved the greater problems of last year as the political system needed reform and the only way to do that was for the army to step in

Looking to the future and assuming that these current reforms achieve their goal and introduce Thailand to its first stable political system with accountability - checks and balances and far reaching powers to remove corrupt MP's and governments then what I have suggested above could work.

Edited by smedly
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This is indeed a dangerous path if they decide to elect an outsider as P.M. the people fought long and hard to break away from Junta style totalitarian government and here it is back again, at the beginning of the coup they promised so much and at the end delivered so little, one thing you can be sure of regardless of the surname of the PM the former title General would be a certain, junta power by stealth, bah.gif you are not welcome back.

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This indicates just how obvious it is, that the military are influencing the CDC ......to the point where which ever party wins, the military would most likely have the final say as to whom becomes the PM.........it's simply a stitch up for the voting population in Thailand.

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Nice to see the politicians are in agreement about something. Perhaps they can get together and see what else they agree about. They might be pleasantly surprised. Maybe they could then look at what the disagree on and try to find some common ground. Maybe they could agree to work together for the benefit of the people. Maybe they could then tell the Junta to go f*** itself and they don't need them anymore.

Who am I kidding? They are politicians. Maybe pigs will fly.

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