Polls close in Thailand’s three-way race as risk of instability looms
No single party expected to secure a clear majority
[BANGKOK] Voters in Thailand came out in numbers on Sunday (Feb 8) for a general election defined by a three-way battle between conservative, progressive and populist camps, with no single party expected to secure a clear majority and prolonging the spectre of political instability.
Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul set the stage for the snap election in mid-December, amid a raging border conflict between Thailand and Cambodia, in what analysts said was a move timed by the conservative leader to cash in on surging nationalism.
At that point, he had been in power for less than 100 days, taking over after the ouster of premier Paetongtarn Shinawatra of the populist Pheu Thai party over the Cambodian crisis.
Pheu Thai, backed by the billionaire former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who himself went to jail just days after his daughter’s removal, is down but not out, according to surveys.
“We have done everything that we can,” Anutin told reporters, after casting his vote in his Bhumjaithai Party’s stronghold of Buriram city, northeast of Bangkok. “We hope the people will have confidence in us.”
But it is the progressive People’s Party, with its message of structural change and reforms to South-east Asia’s second-largest economy, that led most opinion polls during the campaign season.
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“This election is about whether Thailand will get out of its rut, whether Thailand will break out of its political instability and economic doldrums that have persisted,” said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political scientist at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University.
“My preliminary conclusion, I’m afraid to say, is that it will not break out.”
A steady stream of voters walked into polling stations across Bangkok in the hours after polls opened, among them Suwat Kiatsuwan, a 44-year-old company worker.
