Thailand’s second-largest opposition party framed next month’s elections as a generational choice between what it called yesterday “a dark present and a bright future”. Thailand goes to the polls on May 14 for the first election since the kingdom was rocked by major student-led pro-democracy protests in 2020 calling for political reform.
The election is shaping as a clash between incumbent ruling parties, backed by Thailand’s conservative military and royalist establishment, and more reformist and progressive opposition groups.
“Election day is a choice between the dark present and a bright future,” Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, the billionaire co-founder of the Move Forward party, told supporters at a rally in Bangkok.
The party’s leader, Harvard-educated businessman Pita Limjaroenrat, told the crowd of about 2,000 mostly young voters that “we will change Thailand together”. “A vote for Move Forward is a vote for the younger generation to change the country,” he said.
Recent opinion polls show Move Forward is second to Pheu Thai, the biggest opposition party that has Paetongtarn Shinawatra, the 36-year-old daughter of exiled billionaire and former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, as one of its candidates for prime minister. Polling also shows 42-year-old Pita is trailing frontrunner Paetongtarn, whose father and aunt Yingluck were ousted in coups in 2006 and 2014, in the preferred prime minister stakes.
These younger leaders are up against unpopular incumbent Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, 69, who came to power in the 2014 coup, and 77-year-old ex-general Prawit Wongsuwan from the ruling Palang Pracharath Party. Pita has ruled out coalitions with Palang Pracharath or Prayut’s United Thai Nation Party but has expressed willingness to ally with Pheu Thai to form government.
Despite the opinion polls, Thailand’s 2017 constitution gives military-linked parties a big advantage.
A candidate must win a majority of the 500 elected lower-house MPs as well as 250 military-appointed senators to become prime minister. Move Forward evolved out of a Thai court’s decision to dissolve Thanathorn’s Future Forward Party in February 2020.
Newcomer Future Forward netted 6.3mn votes in 2019 to become Thailand’s third-biggest party with 81 seats. Auto-parts billionaire Thanathorn has been banned from running for political office for 10 years but said he was not worried about history repeating itself. “We would start again,” he told AFP.
“If the establishment dissolves our party again, they underestimate the anger of the people.”
Move Forward’s platform includes legalising same-sex marriage, scrapping mandatory military conscription, removing the armed forces from politics, rewriting the constitution, and boosting the minimum daily wage to 450 baht ($13).
It has also advocated reform of Thailand’s royal defamation laws, considered to be among the harshest in the world and which human rights groups say are used to crush political dissent. More than 200 pro-democracy activists are facing royal defamation charges and those convicted can be jailed for up to 15 years for each charge.
So-called Millennial and Gen Z voters represent about 41 percent of Thailand’s 52 million voters.
Fruit seller Pisit Alipong, 30, said he was tired of coups and the military’s involvement in politics.
“They are not capable and a waste of time,” he said. “It’s time to return power to the people after eight years.”
Move Forward Party supporters attend an upcoming election campaign event in Bangkok.
Thai politician and former Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks during a rally in Bangkok.