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Thai prime minister suspended while court mulls whether he breached term limits

Anti-government sign in Thailand
An anti-government protester climbs on a car beside a poster opposing Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha in Bangkok on Wednesday.
(Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press)
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Thailand’s Constitutional Court suspended the prime minister from his duties Wednesday while it decides whether the man who led a military coup in 2014 has violated the country’s term limits, potentially opening a new chapter of turmoil in the nation’s troubled politics.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha’s removal is likely to be only temporary since the court has generally ruled in the government’s favor in a slew of political cases.

Any decision to allow the general to stay on risks invigorating a protest movement that has long sought to oust him and reopening deep fissures in Thailand, which has been rocked by repeated bursts of political chaos since a coup toppled then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in 2006.

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Since then, Thaksin, a telecoms billionaire whose populist appeal threatened the traditional power structure, has remained at the center of the country’s politics, as his supporters and opponents fought for power both at the ballot box and in the streets, sometimes violently. The 2014 takeover ousted his sister from power.

Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan, a close political ally of Prayuth and part of the same military clique that staged the coup, will take over as acting prime minister, a spokesman for the prime minister’s office said Wednesday. Anucha Burapachaisri added that Prayuth would respect the court’s decision and called on others to do the same.

But those who want Prayuth gone don’t want Prawit in power either.

Student-led protests are calling for curbs on King Maha Vajiralongkorn’s wealth and power, openly defying laws against insulting the monarchy.

“No Prayuth. No Prawit. No military coup government,” a leading protest group said in a statement after the court decision Wednesday.

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The group, known as Ratsadon, or the People, issued a new call for protests, but only a small number came in response.

Prayuth’s detractors contend that he has violated a law limiting prime ministers to eight years in power — a threshold they say he hit Tuesday since he officially became prime minister Aug. 24, 2014.

But his supporters contend that his term should be counted from when the current constitution, which contains the term-limit provision, came into effect in 2017. Another interpretation would start the clock in 2019, following an election.

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Tattep Ruangprapaikitseree and other young activists want to rein in the monarchy and its military allies who have ruled Thailand since a 2014 coup.

The case — which sees a court of law deciding whether the leader of a coup has stayed in power too long — highlights Thailand’s particular political culture: Often the soldiers who overthrow elected leaders then try to legitimate their rule and defuse opposition by holding elections and abiding by constitutional restrictions.

For instance, although Prayuth initially came to power in a coup, he won the job at the ballot box after a general election in 2019.

By a vote of 5 to 4 on Wednesday, the Constitutional Court agreed to suspend the prime minister from his duties while it considers a petition from opposition lawmakers. The court’s announcement said Prayuth must submit his defense within 15 days of receiving a copy of the complaint, but it did not say when it would rule.

He will remain in his other post of defense minister, according to Anucha, the spokesman.

Thai activists, scholars and people working with civil society groups were allegedly targeted by a government entity for surveillance with spyware.

Polls show Prayuth’s popularity at a low ebb, with voters blaming him for mishandling the economy and botching Thailand’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In 2020, tens of thousands of people took to the streets to demand that Prayuth and his Cabinet resign, while also calling for the constitution to be amended and the monarchy to be reformed.

Several confrontations between the student-driven protest movement and authorities became violent. A legal crackdown on activists further embittered critics.

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Small protests again appealing to Prayuth to step down and the Constitutional Court to force him to if he refused have been held daily since Sunday, but drawn only small crowds.

“I am very pleased. Gen. Prayuth has stayed for a long time and had no vision to develop the country at all,” Wuttichai Tayati, a 28-year-old who works in marketing, said while protesting in Bangkok on Wednesday. “At least taking him out for now might make Thailand move forward a bit.”

Even if Prayuth does go, replacing him with Prawit will not resolve the standoff.

In addition to his close association with the military clique that seized power, Prawit, 77, was tainted by allegations that he had illegally amassed a collection of luxury watches he couldn’t possibly afford on a government salary, though a court accepted his explanation that they were gifts and cleared him of wrongdoing.

Whether Prawit would or could take the prime minister’s post if the court rules against Prayuth is not clear. He has publicly acknowledged that his health is not good and is better known as a behind-the-scenes political organizer.

Thailand’s deportation of thousands of refugees back to Myanmar goes against international laws on the return of people whose lives may be in danger.

Also, some legal scholars think the eventual replacement would have to come from the small pool of candidates whom the country’s political parties nominated for the job after the 2019 general election. That list did not include Prawit, though it appears possible he could be nominated in case of a deadlock.

If he is not forced out of office, Prayuth must call a new election by March next year, though he has the option of calling one before that.

The eight-year term limit was meant to target Thaksin, the premier in 2006, whose political machine remains powerful. The 2014 coup ousted the government of Thaksin’s sister, Yingluck Shinawatra.

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Thailand’s traditional conservative ruling class, including the military, felt that Thaksin’s popularity posed a threat to the country’s monarchy as well as its own influence. The courts have been stalwart defenders of the established order and ruled consistently against Thaksin and other challengers.

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