Sunday, July 03, 2011

Thaksin party wins Thai election by a landslide

Puea Thai Party"s Yingluck Shinawatra gives a traditional Thai greeting or "wais" to supporters gathered outside party headquarters late into election day in Bangkok July 3, 2011. (REUTERS/Adrees Latif)

Sun Jul 3, 2011
By Jason Szep and Martin Petty
The results were a rebuke of the traditional establishment of generals, old-money families and royal advisers in Bangkok who loathed Thaksin and backed Abhisit, an Oxford-trained economist who struggled to find a common touch.
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's opposition won a landslide election victory on Sunday, led by the sister of former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra in a triumph for red-shirt protesters who clashed with the army last year.

Exit polls showed Yingluck Shinawatra's Puea Thai (For Thais) party winning a clear majority of parliament's 500 seats, paving the way for the 44-year-old business executive to become Thailand's first woman prime minister.

"I'll do my best and will not disappoint you," she told supporters after receiving a call of congratulations from her billionaire brother, who was ousted in a 2006 coup and lives in Dubai to avoid jail for graft charges that he says were politically motivated.

"He told me that there is still much hard work ahead of us," she told reporters.

With nearly all votes counted, Yingluck's party won a projected 261 seats with Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva's Democrat Party taking 162, according to the Election Commission.


Abhisit conceded defeat. "I would like to congratulate the Puea Thai Party for the right to form a government," he said.

Exit polls by Bangkok's Suan Dusit University showed Puea Thai doing even better, winning 313 seats compared to just 152 for the Democrats, dismal enough to threaten Abhisit's job as party leader.

Yingluck's supporters were jubilant, erupting in roars and cheers as television broadcast the exit polls.

"Number one Yingluck," some shouted. "Prime Minister Yingluck" screamed others, as party members slapped each other on the back.

"Yingluck has helped us and now Puea Thai can solve our problems and they'll solve the country's problems," said Saiksa Chankerd, a 40-year-old government worker.

The results were a rebuke of the traditional establishment of generals, old-money families and royal advisers in Bangkok who loathed Thaksin and backed Abhisit, an Oxford-trained economist who struggled to find a common touch.

"People wanted change and they got it," said Kongkiat Opaswongkarn, chief executive of Asia Plus Securities in Bangkok. "It tells you that a majority of people still want most of the things that the ex-prime minister had done for the country in the past."

The size of Puea Thai's victory could usher in much-needed political stability after six years of sporadic unrest that featured the occupation of Bangkok's two airports, a blockade of parliament, an assassination attempt and protests last year that descended into chaotic clashes with the army.

"Chances of blocking Puea Thai in the near term are severely limited," said Roberto Herrera-Lim, Southeast Asian analyst at political risk consultancy Eurasia Group. "The instability everyone has been worried about now looks less likely. The military will have to be pragmatic now."

RED SHIRT VILLAGES

Yingluck was feted like a rock-star by the red shirts who designated entire communities in Thailand's rugged, vote-rich northeast plateau as "red shirt villages" to help mobilise supporters, each festooned with red flags and Thaksin posters.

"This win is very important because it will determine Thailand's destiny," said Kwanchai Praipana, a red-shirt leader in Udon Thani province, where the movement had set up hundreds of red villages in recent weeks.

The red shirts accuse the rich, the establishment and top military brass of breaking laws with impunity -- grievances that have simmered since the 2006 coup -- and have clamoured for Thaksin's return.

Thaksin said he would "wait for the right moment" to come home. "If my return is going to cause problems, then I will not do it yet. I should be a solution, not a problem," he told reporters in Dubai.

Thaksin, a former telecommunications tycoon, scored landslide election wins in 2001 and 2005 and remains idolised by the poor as the first politician to address the needs of millions living beyond Bangkok's bright lights.

Yingluck electrified his supporters, ran a disciplined campaign and promised Thaksin-style populist policies, including a big rise in the national minimum wage and free tablet PCs for nearly one million school children.

Abhisit had warned of instability if Yingluck won, blaming the red shirts for unrest last year in which 91 people, mostly civilians, were killed. They cast Thaksin as a crony capitalist, fugitive and terrorist who condones mob rule.

But Abhisit's denial that troops were responsible for a single death or injury last year was mocked even in the Democrat stronghold of Bangkok. A web-savvy generation could, with a few mouse-clicks, watch videos on Youtube showing military snipers firing on civilians, eroding his credibility.

Abhisit's backers want Thaksin to serve a two-year prison term. They dismiss Yingluck as a simple proxy for her brother.

Throughout the six-week campaign, the two sides presented similar populist campaigns of subsidies for the poor, improved healthcare benefits and infrastructure investment including high-speed rail systems across the country -- a style of policymaking known in Thailand as "Thaksinomics."

The clear majority should make it easier for the opposition to execute those promises but could also fan inflation if they pursue a plan to lift the minimum wage to 300 baht ($9.70) per day -- a roughly 40 percent increase.

The election is Thailand's 26th since it became a democracy in 1932, ending seven centuries of absolute monarchy. Since then, it has seen 18 military coups or coup attempts.

Opinion polls had predicted Puea Thai would win about 240 seats, short of a majority. In that scenario, smaller parties would have been crucial, possibly helping the Democrats stay in power if they had managed to form a coalition government.

Yingluck said her party was in talks with Chart Thai Pattana, a smaller party with a projected 20 seats, to join hands in parliament and provide some breathing space.

($1 = 30.795 Thai Baht)

(Additional reporting by Vithoon Amorn, Ploy Ten Kate, Apornrath Phoonphongphiphat and Praveen Menon; Editing by Nick Macfie and Brian Rhoads)

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

Congratulation to Puea Thai.
It doen't matter who win but Thai is Thai.Never trust them.
I can't wait to congratulate the Kamer opposition Party to win the next election in Cambodia. The cambodian people wanted change this Ho chi Minh puppet communist to real Khmer democracy.

Anonymous said...

this historic election probably goes to show us that siem people in general don't necessary believe in their old way anymore. old ways, like king, queen, outdated thinking, etc... maybe siem will move on pass that stage of ahbullshit pad thugs! and stop rankling about cambodia's preah vihear temple, etc... cambodia needs thailand and each other for mutual respect, not like ahbullshit gov't which only make troubles with cambodia so far everything everything from preah vihear temple to illegal maps, etc, etc! i hope this will be a new era for a good khmer/thai relations to come, really! cambodia wants a friendly thai gov't, not a bully one like ahbullshit type, really!

Anonymous said...

Congratulation to Pheu Thai party. Down with the PAD Thai and Abbhisit Democrat party the trouble makers for Preah Vihear temple. With the new prime minister we can find a solution to the temple without policizing the case as the PAD did.

Anonymous said...

first thai female prime minister in history!

Anonymous said...

Congratulation prime minister Yingluck. It is a happy day for Cambodians too. Hopefully you can help to bring peace to the Cambodian and Thai border conflict. No more beast in the government seat. Now Abhisit can go back to clean the toilet at Oxford university.


mreas prov

Anonymous said...

can hun sen go back sucking Tep Vong 's dick? or Youn expert bo doi in cambodia? heh ..heh ..heh..

Anonymous said...

This is democracy win through general election, not the Abhishit's way of power grab. So we got the new prime minister of Thailand. Hope the PAD THAI group won't cause anymore trouble.

Anonymous said...

Congratulation PM Yingluck. That is the democracy in Thailand, in Cambodia no.

Anonymous said...

Abhisit, Kasit and Suwit are out... Thai people have decided they don't them anymore. Please kindly get lost!!

Anonymous said...

Wow, she made history. Abhishit 's administration using forces on Khmers and its citizens.

Anonymous said...

yingluck is so beautiful, i love her. she's going to make friends with cambodia. congrats, ms. yingluck!

she's an inspiration for many khmer women as well. soon, too, cambodia will be ready for first woman prime minister. every smart, intelligent, educated khmer woman is eligible in her own rights, you know! never give up hope, cambodia, learn from ms. yingluck of thailand, ok!

Anonymous said...

Ok Hun Sen when you will be defeated you should behave like a man and bow out like Abhisit Vejjajiva does by praising and congratulating the winner. But Khmer people think that you are not man enough to do it, Ah komsaak nhee.

Anonymous said...

cambodia should think about electing rich,educated, smart, intelligent khmer man or woman for prime minister of cambodia! the super rich one like ms yingluck because super rich people are already rich, so, they do not need to be corrupted like poor people, you know! it is the poor ones that proned to corruption, etc, you know! make sense? i think so, too!

Anonymous said...

6:29 AM

Well Hun Sen has PHD's and is super rich. Should Cambodia vote him again?

Anonymous said...

7:18 AM WHY NOT???

Indeed, I only have rice but no សាច់ជ្រូក, សាច់មាន់, សាច់កោ និង ត្រី.

Anonymous said...

Congratulation to the hand in the picture that touch her pussy.

Anonymous said...

Congratulation, newly elected first female PM of Thailand. It is time for our peace, freedom, and prosperity for two countries, Thailand and Khmer Kingdom. This results of election of New Female Thai PM will bring the positive thinking and mutual understanding between the two.

Khmer Yeourng!

Anonymous said...

ជយោ!ស្រីលក្ខិណា​ ស៊ីណាវត្រា
ឈរឈ្មោះជាគណៈបក្សភឿថៃរបស់បងប្រុស​លោកស្រីគឺ តាក់ស៊ីន ស៊ីណាវត្រា។
ថៃហៅស្យាមបានកើតជាប្រទេសក្នុងឆ្នាំ១២៣៨
រហូតដល់ឆ្នាំ២០១១ជិតប្រាំបីសតវត្ស ទើបមាន
ស្រីជាដឹកនាំប្រទេស។
សូមលោកស្រីដឹកនាំប្រទេសស្យាបានសុខសន្តិ
ភាពនិងចំរុងចំរើនគ្រប់ប្រការ ហើយរក្សាសាន្ត
ជាមួយប្រទេសមានកម្ពុជាលាវជាដើម។
ម្យ៉ាងទៀតក្នុងឆ្នាំ២០១២ឬឆ្នាំ២០១៣ ឲ្យគណៈ
ប្រជាជនបរាជ័យដូចគណៈប្រជាធិបតេយ្យ
អភិសិទ្ធិ​ វេជ្ជជិវៈទៅហោង។ហើយសូមកុំឲ្យមាន
ការធ្វើរដ្ធប្រហារ។

Anonymous said...

If this red-shirt lady becomes first Thai Prime Minister it will cause:

1. Long-term unrest in Thailand.

( unrest between yellow-shirts and red-shirts supporters ).

2. In Cambodia :

What is the real reasons behind Hun Sen supporting Thaksin ?

One of the reasons is truth story about this is look at the past activities and real background of thai red-shirts architecture you will see the closed relationship betwenn Ho Chi Minh and the previous and present of Thai red-shirts leaders.

So yuon Hanoi has a strong network in Thailand , red-shirts is part of this network , Thai red-shirts formally called Red Thai.

Note: 1. Pol Pot used to support this red Thai to block Thai ambition to swallow part of Cambodia as Thai did during the 1940s in Battambang, Sieam Reap ....ect.

2. But yuon through its puppet Hun Sen support Thai red-shirts to swallow Thailand in the future when they have finish Lao and Cambodia.

3. So former Red Thai or better known as Thai red-shirts most of them are origionally are Khmer known as Khmer Leu such as Surin , Buriram ect... . are not bad people it depent on how and who used them for what purpose.

Anonymous said...

If this female Thai becomes first Thai Prime Minister will it be good or bad for Cambodia ?

Please have a look at my commnet above of 11:09 AM.

Anonymous said...

what can i say, yingluck has everything; she's rich and now has power, and she's pretty, too, wow! what an inspiration for cambodia!

Anonymous said...

2:29 AM

Since Tep Vong is not allowed to touch a woman, Hun Sen sucking his dick would be the 7th stage paradise to Tep Vong, and he might get addicted like opium.
And when Tep Vong smiles, he looks exactly like a monkey.