Monday , November 25 2024

Thai court dissolves reformist party that won election

08-08-2024

BANGKOK: A Thai court has ordered the dissolution of the reformist party which won the most seats and votes in last year’s election – but was blocked from forming a government.

The ruling also banned Move Forward’s charismatic, young former leader Pita Limjaroenrat and 10 other senior figures from politics for 10 years.

The verdict from the Constitutional Court was expected, after its ruling in January that Move Forward’s campaign promise to change royal defamation laws was unconstitutional.

The court had said changes to the notoriously harsh lese majesty law was tantamount to calling for the destruction of the constitutional monarchy.

Wednesday’s verdict again serves as a stark reminder of how far unelected institutions are willing to go to preserve the power and status of the monarchy but the ruling does not mean an end to the reformist movement in Thai politics.

The surviving 142 Move Forward MPs are expected to transfer to another registered party and continue their role as the main opposition in parliament.

“A new journey has begun. Let’s keep walking together, people,” the party said in a message accompanied by a video on its social media platforms.

Chaithawat Tulathon, the leader of the opposition and one of the MPs barred from politics, stood up in the chamber and bid farewell to his colleagues, saying it was an “honor” to work with them.

This verdict “may raise the question whether Thailand is a constitutional monarchy or an absolute monarchy”, said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, professor of political science at Chulalongkorn University.

He said it was “deja vu on one hand, and uncharted territory, on the other”.

This is more or less a repeat of what happened in 2020 when the then Future Forward Party, which had also done unexpectedly well in an election, was also dissolved, and transformed itself into the Move Forward Party.

That verdict four years ago ignited huge street protests, led by a new generation of student activists, which lasted for six months and voiced unprecedented demands for the monarchy to be made more accountable.

The authorities have since made extensive use of the lese majeste law to prosecute hundreds of protest leaders, including some Move Forward MPs.

The law has been widely criticised as stifling freedom of expression in Thailand, and in its manifesto Move Forward had proposed less severe punishments jail sentences have been as high as 50 years and a more rigorous process for filing charges.

Fears among reformists that Move Forward would not do as well in last year’s election as Future Forward had in 2019 proved unfounded.

The party defied expectations to outperform every other party and become the largest in parliament, revealing a strong yearning for change among Thai voters.

However, the military-appointed senate blocked Move Forward from forming a government over its lese majesty proposals, allowing an 11-party coalition of more conservative parties to take power instead.

With so many activists in jail, in exile or fighting criminal charges the large-scale protests seen back in 2020 are much less likely today.

Even Move Forward’s very mild proposals for a less severe lese majesty law have led to the party being stripped of its top leaders, just as its previous incarnation Future Forward was four years ago.

And anyone thinking of organizing protests similar to those four years ago will know that they too will be subjected to the tough penalties of lese majesty and several other sweeping laws in the Thai criminal code. (Int’l News Desk)

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