The liberal reformist seeking to become Thailand’s prime minister said Monday he was marshalling support for his next tilt at the job after military-appointed senators foiled his first attempt.
Efforts to elect a government have deadlocked on parliament’s refusal to endorse the candidacy of Pita Limjaroenrat, whose Move Forward Party (MFP) won the most seats in May elections.
Establishment lawmakers consider his party’s pledge to reform the kingdom’s strict royal defamation laws a red line and the Harvard-educated politician’s nomination fell 51 votes short last week.
Pita said the eight-party coalition supporting him had agreed to renominate him for a second vote on Wednesday, adding that he was canvassing senators who did not support him in the first round.
“We still are talking to find more support,” he told reporters.
“There are several who missed the vote because of other duties,” he said. “It is still possible they might vote.”
Pita’s Move Forward Party (MFP) won nearly 40 percent of the vote in May’s poll but his attempt at forming a government was blocked by supporters of the Thai establishment.
Junta-appointed senators oppose MFP’s proposal to soften the kingdom’s royal defamation law, under which offenders can be jailed for up to 15 years.
Just 13 members of the 250-strong upper chamber voted for him last week.
Thailand’s Constitutional Court could also take up a case Wednesday on whether Pita, 42, should be disqualified from parliament entirely for owning shares in a media company, prohibited for MPs under the Thai constitution.
Pita, who made his fortune in a family-run agrifood business, has said the shares were inherited from his father. The station has not broadcast since 2007.
He said on Monday he was not concerned by the Constitutional Court case against him the same day as he submits himself to another parliamentary vote.
“It does not affect my candidacy for prime minister,” he said.
The court has also agreed to hear a case alleging that the MFP’s campaign promises to amend the royal defamation laws are tantamount to a plan to “overthrow” the constitutional monarchy.
The roadblocks thrown in front of Pita’s candidacy have dismayed supporters eager at the prospect of progressive reforms after nine years of army-backed rule that followed a 2014 coup.
“What I would like to see is for the senators to respect our votes,” retail worker Preaw Roengsart, 28, told AFP from the sidelines of a small Bangkok rally for the party on Sunday.
“I feel like this is it for us. If we don’t come out and speak now our voice will forever be silenced.”
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