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Thailand's Anutin readies for coalition talks after election win
Thailand's caretaker premier Anutin Charnvirakul was preparing for coalition talks Monday after a stunning election victory for his conservative Bhumjaithai Party.
Bhumjaithai was forecast by Channel 3 to have won almost 200 seats in Sunday's vote, well ahead of others but short of an outright majority in the 500-member lower house.
The progressive People's Party trailed at a little above 100 seats, while jailed former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's Pheu Thai party came in third.
Pheu Thai is seen as a likely coalition partner for Anutin, as they were allies until Bhumjaithai pulled out over a scandal linked to the Cambodia border dispute.
Thaksin is serving a one-year prison sentence for corruption in office, but many observers expect him to be released earlier than scheduled alongside a political agreement.
Anutin, who took office in September, declined to be drawn Sunday on potential coalition talks, noting the election results remained unofficial.
"We will wait until its more clear, and every party has to meet their executive board to discuss the position," he said.
Political analyst Napon Jatusripitak expected Bhumjaithai to "move quickly" to form a government in which its interests would prevail.
"Given the seat distribution, Bhumjaithai is likely to lead a government in which its influence predominates and weighs most decisively in shaping both policy direction and implementation," he said.
- Cambodia conflict -
The Southeast Asian nation's next administration will need to tackle anaemic economic growth, with its vital tourism industry yet to rebound to pre-Covid highs, and manage fallout over multibillion-dollar cyberscam networks operating from the region.
Perhaps most pressing is the Cambodia dispute, which erupted into open fighting in July and December, killing scores of people on both sides and displacing around a million altogether.
The conflict was top of mind for many voters, with analysts saying a wave of nationalism propelled Anutin to victory.
"Thailand will move like it moved in the past three months. We will see nationalism, a strong position on Cambodia and economic policies. Nothing changes," said Virot Ali, politics lecturer at Thammasat University.
Soon after becoming premier -- following the removal of two predecessors from Pheu Thai by the courts -- Anutin authorised the armed forces to take whatever action they saw fit on the border.
Thailand's military took control of several disputed areas in the latest fighting in December, and a fragile ceasefire remains in place.
"Once I became prime minister, everything we once lost, it has come back to be ours again," Anutin said at a rally in the Sisaket border province last week.
Paul Chambers, an associate senior fellow at ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, cautioned that Anutin's victory "will allow the military to become even more autonomous of civilian control".
- Conservative win -
Thailand's political history is replete with military coups, bloody street protests and judicial intervention.
But Napon pointed out that Bhumjaithai's victory was "the first time in a very long while that a conservative party has emerged with the largest number of seats".
"In that sense, the result may have resolved a recurring dilemma in Thai politics, whereby conservative interests have repeatedly intervened to curtail democratic politics after losing at the ballot box," he added.
A constitution drafted under military rule following the last coup in 2014 gives significant power to institutions appointed by the senate, which is not directly elected.
Around 60 percent of voters were projected to have backed constitutional reform in principle in a referendum on Sunday, albeit with no specific measures on the table.
But Bhumjaithai will now be in a position to guide the reform process, and its conservative instincts make radical change less likely.
C.Bruderer--VB