FRIDAY, March 29, 2024
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Prayut coy on his political future … until next month

Prayut coy on his political future … until next month

PRIME MINISTER Prayut Chan-o-cha yesterday reiterated his promise to clarify his political future next month, saying that he first has to decide if he will stay in politics before he announces which party he will choose to join.

The junta leader said he would decide which political party he would join only after deciding whether to remain in politics. 
“I told you I still don’t know if I should stay [in politics] or not. I have to see why I should stay,” Prayut said. “More importantly, if people do not vote for the party I join, how can I come [back to politics]?”
When pressed for an answer about his political future, the head of the ruling junta National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) said: “You don’t have to ask me today. I will say it myself in September.” He also said that political restrictions would be eased by that time.
When a reporter joked that she would ask him about his decision on the first day of September, he replied: “Whatever day in September. Let’s focus on tackling the country’s problems now.”
During his trip to the United Kingdom in June, Prayut said that he would disclose his decision about his political future in September.
Amid political issues, the NCPO plans to “do political unlocking” by authorising the Election Commission (EC) to start preparing for the next election and keep up with a poll timeline that has been repeatedly delayed.
Prayut said that while the NCPO meeting yesterday did not touch on the election, more clarity should be seen once the MPs election bill and the Senate selection bill are published in the Royal Gazette.
“You will see more political clarity in September. There’s no need to ask me about it now,” he said.
Prayut said the legal process “should head to election” once the MP election bill draft, one of four organic laws that must be passed before holding an election, is published. The election bill, even if published, still needs to wait for another 90 days to come into effect as stipulated by the junta-appointed legislators.
EC president Supachai Somcharoen said earlier that the agency should be able to organise election-related matters during those 90 days to keep up with the election which, according to the charter, must be held within 150 days once all four essential organic laws are in effect.
Concerns about legislative hurdles ahead of the election have also increased as some National Legislative Assembly (NLA) members also planned to propose changes on the already enacted EC law.
The NLA source said on Monday that the proposal might be scrapped following concerns that the amendments would result in the elections being delayed but also less transparency.
Prayut said yesterday that while the amendment proposal is not yet finalised, the new EC board should also be allowed to consider the local election inspectors. The premier’s remarks may imply that more work needs to be done on consideration of the election inspectors, despite being already planned by the current acting EC.
Meanwhile, the junta leader was upset yesterday over a joke video clip that dubs his first single “Return Happiness to Thailand” as a song full of lies.
In the video clip, posted in June by a Facebook user, a boy asks his father: “Which song tells lies in every verse?” 
After his father made a few unlucky guesses, the boy started singing the famous “Return Happiness to Thailand” written by Prayut more than four years ago after the 2014 coup. The lyric says: “We will keep our promise. Just give us a little bit more time.”
Government spokesman Lt-General Sansern Kaewkamnerd said yesterday that Prayut had expressed concern that some individuals with ill intentions had made such a video to attack the government by accusing it of failing to keep its promises. 
“General Prayut assures he is not delaying the election. Everything follows the road map. We all know that soon the organic laws will be promulgated,” Sansern said. 
The spokesman went on to say that the PM flagged the video clip for dragging a little kid into politics and making him a political tool.
“General Prayut said that this is not nice at all,” he said. “They are just kids. They deserve to be raised right and taught things good for them.
“We’ve seen this before during the protests that involved the use of war weapons,“ Sansern added. “They brought kids around the bunkers. General Prayut doesn’t want to see that atmosphere anymore. Kids should be safe.”
Sansern also mentioned other clips that showed pedestrians being interviewed about the economic situation. He said Prayut advised people to see the official figures from credible sources that showed improvements. “And General Prayut also wanted everyone to also improve themselves in order to improve the overall quality of life,” Sansern said. “He stressed that this government is trying to provide the equipment for people to fish rather than giving them the fish.”
 

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