Artikel tagged “march 24”

  • Bhumjaithai and Democrats holding off decision for key roles

    Bhumjaithai and Democrats holding off decision for key roles

    PHOTO: The horse-trading continues Nearly two months after the March 24 election and still no government formalised. The horse-trading has been fast and furious with rumours and speculation running rife over recent days

  • His Majesty urges Thais to elect ‘good people’ in today’s election

    His Majesty urges Thais to elect ‘good people’ in today’s election

    His Majesty the King has quoted from a speech delivered by his father, the late King Bhumibol, to urge voters to elect “good people” to rule the country. The Royal Household Bureau announced at 8.44pm that His Majesty had instructed the Lord Chamberlain to quote from a royal speech delivered by King Bhumibol at the sixth gathering of National Boy Scouts at the Vajiravudh Boy Scout Camp in Chon Buri province on December 11, 1989, as a reminder to the public.

  • Alcohol ban again this weekend around Thailand

    Alcohol ban again this weekend around Thailand

    The election is two days away.

  • Choosing sides. Abhisit Vejjajiva will have to choose after Sunday.

    Choosing sides. Abhisit Vejjajiva will have to choose after Sunday.

    PHOTO: The Nation Sunday’s election will not be the end, it will only be another episode in a two-decade long drama as Thailand struggles with democracy and attempts to throw off the shackles of nearly a century of military tampering in political affairs. Thailand’s oldest political party, the Democrats, head into Sunday’s election with leader Abhisit Vejjajiva facing some tough decisions in the first poll since the 2014 coup. At one end of the political spectrum in Thailand are the pro-military, pro-status quo parties

  • Will it be same same but different after this Sunday’s vote?

    Will it be same same but different after this Sunday’s vote?

    Thailand’s military junta, which has ruled the Land of Smiles since snatching control in a coup in 2014, is now trying to bring its leader, Prayut Chan-o-cha, back as an ‘elected’ PM in next week’s election. The NCPO has cobbled together an ambitious economic plan that’s rests on a 1.7 trillion baht (US$54 billion) spending spree to revive competitiveness in an economy that remains hamstrung by depressed business confidence and investment

  • Constitutional Court dissolves Thai Raksa Chart party and bans party members

    Constitutional Court dissolves Thai Raksa Chart party and bans party members

    The Thai Constitutional Court has ordered the dissolution of Thai Raksa Chart Party for naming Prince Ubolratana, a member of the Royal Family, as its prime ministerial candidate. The Court claims this action undermined Thailand’s constitutional monarchy.

  • Thanathorn’s “unfinished 1932 mission” questioned

    Thanathorn’s “unfinished 1932 mission” questioned

    PHOTO: Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit appears on Channel 3  “May I ask what is the 1932 unfinished mission that Thanathorn, the party leader, announced he will complete?” The Future Forward party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit’s controversial remarks, that one of the party’s policies is to complete the ‘unfinished mission of the 1932 coup makers’, has provoked a strong reaction among Thai royalists. The incident to which he refers is historically known as the Siamese Revolution .

  • Prayut says he’s still waiting for an invitation to join a party for the election

    Prayut says he’s still waiting for an invitation to join a party for the election

    Thai PM Prayut Chan-o-cha says he won’t be reshuffling his cabinet following the resignations of four ministers who are core members of the pro-junta Palang Pracharat party. And he declared that he will seek to return to power only through election. He also openly ruled out the possibility of exploiting the provisional clauses in the Constitution to be re-appointed PM with the support of the junta-controlled Senate.

  • NCPO restrict social media and advertising in election campaign

    NCPO restrict social media and advertising in election campaign

    “Following the confirmation that Thailand’s much-postponed election would finally be held on 24 March – the first election since the military seized power in a bloodless coup in 2014 – the election commission released strict guidelines on political campaigning.” The world’s media is starting to report on the shackles put on political parties campaigning for the Thai general election, scheduled for March 24.