Thailand’s young voters spearhead ‘earth-shaking’ calls for change in military dominated kingdom

Move Forward Party supporters react to a speech from Pita Limjaroenrat, leader of the Move Forward Party, during a campaign rally in Bangkok, Thailand, on April 22.
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As Thailand heads to the polls on Sunday a “lost generation” of young voters fired up by a yearning for change are keeping alive previously taboo topics, including the military’s stranglehold on the levers of power – and even royal reform.

The May 14 poll is the first since youth-led mass pro-democracy protests in 2020 and only the second since a military coup in 2014 ousted an elected government, restoring a conservative clique that has pulled the strings in the kingdom’s turbulent politics for decades.

While an old battleground has emerged between democratic allies and pro-military parties, at the heart of this year’s election is a fight led by a young generation who want what they see as a better version of Thailand.

Two parties – populist Pheu Thai and progressive Move Forward – are leading the polls, with both campaigning to remove the military from politics.

The opposition Pheu Thai is aiming for a landslide. Paetongtarn Shinawatra, 36, is one of the party’s three prime ministerial candidates and the latest member of a controversial political dynasty to contest.

Both her father, Thaksin, a former policeman turned billionaire telecoms tycoon, and her aunt Yingluck ran governments that were ousted in military coups. Both also live in exile, with Thai courts sentencing them to prison on corruption charges in their absence.

Enormously popular among Thailand’s rural and urban working classes, Thaksin-aligned parties have won every election since 2001.

But it’s Move Forward that is being described by analysts as a “game changer.”

Contesting for the first time, the party’s platform includes a radical national reform agenda that threatens to shake up Thailand’s conservative establishment.

Move Forward Party supporters hold up mobile phone lights in support of Pita Limjaroenrat, leader of the Move Forward Party, during a campaign rally in Bangkok, Thailand, on April 22.
Andre Malerba/Bloomberg/Getty Images

It is pledging deep structural reforms to how Thailand is run: changes to the military, the economy, the decentralization of power and even reforms to the previously untouchable monarchy.

“That is earth-shaking in Thailand as [the monarchy] is a taboo subject,” said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political scientist from Chulalongkorn University.

“That’s why this election is unlike any other. That’s why this election is the most important so far in Thai elections. Because it’s moving the agenda, it’s moving the frontier to next stage… to the core of Thailand’s problems.”

Two separate opinion polls issued last week put Move Forward’s leader Pita Limjaroenrat, 42, as favorite for prime minister, according to Reuters, suggesting the party’s reform platform is appealing to not just young Thais but a wider society.

From the streets to the ballot
Three years ago, youth-led protests swept the southeast Asian nation demanding democratic and military reforms, constitutional change, and – most shockingly for Thailand – to curb the powers of the monarchy.

Those protests ended in a police crackdown and hundreds of arrests while the Covid pandemic raged on, but their anger – and the movement that was born out of it – never went away.

Some of those protesters are now contesting Sunday’s election, vowing to enact change from within.

Chonthicha Jangrew, 30, was a prominent fixture at the protests and is now vying for a parliament seat with the Move Forward Party.

“We feel that we are the lost generation. We have been living under an authoritarian government during our most critical years,” she told CNN. “We were repeatedly told we have to work harder, but we just can’t see our future in this country … it is still difficult to buy our own house or even a car.”

Chonthicha has been out on the campaign trail promoting her party’s policies, including to reduce the military’s budget and size, abolish military service, to get rid of military-appointed senators, and to draft a new constitution that “serves the people.”

“We can’t solve our economic problems if we don’t have good and stable politics,” she said. “After we have good politics, we can have a good welfare state for the people. Especially as we are facing economic and environmental challenges, a pandemic and climate change.”

Protest leader, Chonthicha Jangrew, speaks to media as pro-democracy protesters and student activists march to The Grand Palace on November 8, 2020 in Bangkok, Thailand.
Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images

She wants to see the Thai government respect human rights and freedom of expression. And that includes amendments to Article 112 of the Criminal Code – Thailand’s strict lese majeste law that criminalizes criticism of the monarchy and makes any frank discussion of the subject fraught with risk.

Lese majeste convictions carry long prison terms and currently, anyone can bring a case, even if they aren’t connected to the alleged crime.

Before the 2020 protests it was highly unusual to hear Thais talk openly about the monarchy. Now, Chonthicha said people are discussing monarchy reform and the extension of the king’s power.

“This is already a success for us, we have already turned a taboo subject into a public debate. It used to be a prohibited topic to discuss, now everyone is talking about it,” she said.

It could be an uphill battle for Chonthicha. She is facing dozens of legal charges linked to her activism including two counts of lese majeste, and four charges of sedition for her role in the protest movement between 2020 and 2022.

Im Jeepetch, a 24-year-old IT engineer from Bangkok, says she plans to vote for Move Forward.

“It has been not OK for me at all for the past eight years,” Im said, citing in particular frustration with the job market and Thailand’s education system.

Source: https://edition.cnn.com/2023/05/11/asia/thailand-election-move-forward-youth-intl-hnk/index.html

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