Thai general election, 2005

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General elections were held in Thailand on 6 February 2005. With a turnout of 60.7 percent, the Thai Rak Thai Party (Thais Love Thais Party) of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra won a landslide victory. Out of 500 seats in the House of Representatives, Thaksin's party won 374 seats, with its former coalition partner, the Chart Thai Party (Thai Nation Party), taking 26 seats. The opposition Democrat Party of Thailand (Phak Prachatipat) won only 96 seats and the newly-formed Mahachon Party took three seats.

Contents

[edit] Results

Thaksin's party dominated most of Thailand's regions. In Bangkok it won 32 seats to the Democrats' four and Chart Thai's one. In the Central region it won 79 seats, to 10 for Chart Thai and eight for the Democrats. In the North, it won 70 seats to the Democrats' five. In the North-East (Isan) region, it won a massive 126 seats, to the Chart Thai's six, with two each going to the Democrats' the Mahachon Party. Only in the South was the landslide resisted. Democrats won 52 seats in their traditional stronghold, while Chart Thai and Thai Rak Thai won only one seat each. Of the 100 seats elected by proportional representation, Thais Love Thais appeared to be winning 67, to the Democrats' 25 and Chart Thai's eight.

An election poster for Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in Bangkok, January 2005
An election poster for Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in Bangkok, January 2005

Thaksin said he would now form a one-party administration, ending his uneasy coalition with Chart Thai. The Bangkok newspaper The Nation said that Thaksin "has apparently won the strongest popular re-endorsement in Thai political history and is set to be the most powerful prime minister ever elected to lead the Kingdom." Thaksin is the first democratically elected Prime Minister of Thailand to complete a full four-year term in office and the first to win an absolute majority in the House in a relatively free election.

The day after the election, Thaksin said he would "work harder and faster to implement policies and resolve the country's problems." He said the government would "quickly boost Thailand's competitiveness in the international market, and would also look into improving religious affairs issues." This was taken as a reference to the situation in the south of the country, which has a large Muslim population, where there has been a history of unrest and disturbances, and where Thaksin's party won only one seat. The Nation newspaper reported: "Many voters [in the south] said they had lost faith in Thaksin, who has refused to apologise for incidents such as the deaths of 78 Muslims in October who were held in military custody after being arrested for protesting in the village of Tak Bai."

The national summary of seats by party follow:

ed Summary of the 6 February 2005 House of Representatives of Thailand election results
Parties Votes % Seats
Thai Loves Thais Party (Phak Thai Rak Thai) 60.7 375
Democrat Party (Phak Prachatipat) 18.3 96
Thai Nation Party (Phak Chart Thai) 11.4 27
Great People's Party (Phak Machacon) 8.3 2
Phak Khonkhoplodnee (Khonkhoplodnee Party) 0.6 -
New Aspiration Party (Phak Khwam Wang Mai) 0.4 -
Total (turnout 72.% %)   500
Source: Angus Reid, The Nation and Adam Carr's Electoral Archives
Party Northern
Seats
Northeastern
Seats
Central
Seats
Southern
Seats
Bangkok
Seats
Party List
Seats
TOTAL
SEATS
Thai Rak Thai
(TRT)
70 (+18) 126 (+42) 79 (+35) 1 (NC) 32 (+4) 67 (+19) 375 (+126)
Democrat Party
(DP)
5 (-12) 2 (-3) 8 (-12) 52 (+4) 4 (-5) 25 (-6) 96 (-34)
Chart Thai Party
(Thai Nation Party)
0 (-3) 6 (-5) 11 (-8) 1 (+1) 1 (+1) 8 (+2) 26 (-13)
Mahachon Party
(Great People's Party)
1 (N/A) 2 (N/A) 0 (N/A) 0 (N/A) 0 (N/A) 0 (N/A) 3 (N/A)
Total 76 136 97 54 37 100 500
    • Results include outcomes of by-elections held in October 2005 as a result of fraud in the first round of voting.
    • Gains and losses of seats shown are compared to results of previous election held in 2001.

[edit] Background

The House of Representatives (Sapha Poothaen Rassadorn) consists of 400 members elected from single-member constituencies and 100 members elected from national party lists on a proportional basis. At the January 2001 elections, Thai Rak Thai won 248 of the 500 seats, and gained a majority by forming an alliance with the Chart Thai Party (Thai Nation Party) of Banharn Silpa-Archa, which won 41 seats. Since then Thaksin's party has absorbed three minor parties, giving him about 300 seats in the legislature. The Democratic Party of Thailand won 128 seats in 2001.

Between the 2001 and 2005 elections the Thai party situation was simplified by the disappearance of minor parties. Nearly all seats were expected to go to Thai Rak Thai, Chart Thai and the Democratic Party. The only other significant party was the Mahachon Party (Phak Mahachon or "Great People's Party"), a breakaway group from the Democratic Party.

[edit] The Democrat campaign

Democrat Party poster highlighting the "201" campaign
Democrat Party poster highlighting the "201" campaign

The Democrat Party, led by Banyat Bantadtan, did not seriously expect to defeat the coalition of the other two parties, but hoped to win 200 seats, which would have been a gain of 70 seats. However, intra-party conflicts between Banyat's southern faction and the Bangkok faction led by Abhisit Vejjajiva made this goal appear even less realistic. The Democrats also developed a populist agenda, promising more jobs, free education and health care, and combating crime and corruption. However, the party refused to give details of their policies.[1]

The TRT's landslide victory cast doubt over the future of both party leaders, and Banyat resigned as Democrat Party leader immediately after the election. Abhisit Vejjajiva, Banyat's successor, said: "It will take a long time to revive the party because we need to look four years ahead and consider how to stay in the hearts of the people."

[edit] The Thai Rak Thai campaign

The Thai Rak Thai party was seeking to win an absolute majority in its own right, something no political party had ever achieved in Thailand at a genuinely free election. A coalition of other parties and civil society groups was formed to prevent this, arguing that Thaksin already has too much power and that giving him an absolute parliamentary majority would encourage what they alleged were his authoritarian tendencies. Prominent academic Kasem Sirisamphan, for example, accused Thaksin of running a "parliamentary dictatorship" and said that "people do not want a billionaire prime minister to further dominate the country and its politics."

Thaksin's party replied that it had provided Thailand with stable, competent and corruption-free government, although critics said that corruption has actually increased under Thaksin's watch. Party spokesperson Suranand Vejjajiva said that Thais Love Thais was "the first party which could translate its populist policies into action. Its achievements and Mr Thaksin's vision give the party a clear edge and it will win an absolute majority," he said.

Promotion for Thaksin Shinawatra and his party on a Bangkok tuk-tuk (taxi)
Promotion for Thaksin Shinawatra and his party on a Bangkok tuk-tuk (taxi)

Thai politics tend to be regionally based. Thai Rak Thai is strongest in the north-east region (Isan), the poorest and most populated part of the country, where Thaksin's populist policies are most popular. TRT is also dominant in the north, since Thaksin was born in Chiang Mai and has directed much government spending to his home region. Thai Rak Thai is strong in the Chao Phraya valley as well, although the region has historically been a stronghold of Chart Thai, which still dominates in some of the central provinces. Voters in Bangkok, the wealthiest part of the country, are less predictable, but steady economic growth, goal-oriented campaign agendas like “Healthy Bangkok” and “10 new MRT lines across the capital”[1], and the publicity Thaksin received after the Great Indian Ocean Tsunami was enough to swing the allegiance of the capital's middle-class to TRT. The Democrats are strongest in the south, but also have some strength among liberal-minded voters in Bangkok.

During 2004 most observers suggested that Thaksin's popularity had declined since its peak in 2002, and that he was unlikely to achieve an absolute majority for his own party. The deaths of Muslim protesters in southern Thailand and the bird flu outbreak were seen as issues which the Thaksin government had handled poorly.

[edit] The tsunami

These calculations were upset by the disaster of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, which devastated six southern coastal provinces. The tsunami and its aftermath drove the election campaign to a large extent out of the media, and also produced a strong sense of national solidarity, from both of which an incumbent government could be expected to benefit. Most commentators praised the Thaksin government's response to the disaster. Political commentator Veera Prateepchaikul, who identified himself as an opponent of Thaksin, wrote in the Bangkok Post on 10 January: "Mr Thaksin deserves credit for his quick response to the disaster, his decisive leadership and his skills in crisis management."

Veera also pointed out that the provinces directly affected by the tsunami were part of the Democrat Party's southern stronghold, and that Thaksin's high profile, particularly on state television, in delivering aid to the area might improve his party's chances of winning more seats in the south. "The Democrats might cry foul that Mr Thaksin is using the state media for campaign purposes," Veera wrote, "but the people may think otherwise." Only a miracle, he wrote, could turn the "tsunami tide which is now clearly in favour of Mr Thaksin." In the event the Democrats retained their dominance in southern Thailand, winning 50 of the 52 southern seats for which figures are available.

[edit] Pre-election predictions

Given such increased expectations, a failure by Thais Love Thais to win 250 seats would have been seen as a considerable setback for Thaksin. The Bangkok newspaper The Nation published predictions by its reporters on 8 January, predicting that of the 400 constituency seats, Thai Rak Thai would win 233, the Democrats 94, Chart Thai 47 and Great People 26. If the parties achieved similar results in the 100 proportionate seats, this would have given Thais Love Thais about 290 seats overall and the Democrats about 120 seats. This proved to be a considerable under-estimate of the scale of Thaksin's victory.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Aurel Croissant and Daniel J. Pojar, Jr., Quo Vadis Thailand? Thai Politics after the 2005 Parliamentary Election, Strategic Insights, Volume IV, Issue 6 (June 2005)
  • "Rivals battle to end Thaksin era," Bangkok Post, 6 January 2005
  • Veera Prateepchaikul, "Thaksin is swept along by the tsunami," Bangkok Post, 10 January 2005
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