Thai parliament's joint session rejects bill aimed at weakening military's political role

Published November 17, 2021
In this 2014 file photo, Thailand's National Legislative Assembly members attend during a vote for a new President of The National Assembly at The parliament house in Bangkok. — Reuters
In this 2014 file photo, Thailand's National Legislative Assembly members attend during a vote for a new President of The National Assembly at The parliament house in Bangkok. — Reuters

Thailand's legislature shot down on Wednesday a draft bill aimed at strengthening democracy, in which its backers sought to scrap or overhaul of key institutions they said had been hijacked by the military elite.

A joint session of the lower house of parliament and the Senate voted 473-206 to reject the bill, with six abstentions, which called for a constitution passed under a military junta in 2017 to be changed to ensure a clear separation of powers.

Thailand's government is still led by the architects of a 2014 coup, who remained in power after a 2019 election that its rivals say was stacked in the military's favour.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, the coup leader, has denied that.

The draft was backed by 130,000 petitioners and sought to abolish the 250-seat, junta-appointed Senate, and restructure the Constitutional Court and key state agencies.

Read more: Former PM accuses Thai military of rigging election

The government's critics, including a formidable student-led protest movement that emerged last year, say democracy has been subverted by the military and its royalists' allies, who wield influence over independent institutions.

“The 2017 constitution protects and enables General Prayuth to extend his power by providing mechanisms of control through the Senate and independent agencies,” one of the bill's proponents, Parit Wacharasindhu, told legislators.

Since 2019, 21 bills have been proposed to parliament seeking constitutional amendments, only one of which has passed, which sought changes to the balloting system.

Pro-government lawmakers defended the constitution, reiterating that it was endorsed in a referendum and that the coup was necessary to address a political crisis.

“To only fix the problem of coup and its consequences without addressing the political problems that came before that, will that lead to a perfect democracy?” lawmaker Wanchai Sornsiri said during the debate.

Thailand has seen 20 constitutions and 13 coups since the end of absolute monarchy in 1932.

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