Thailand election explained as voters head to the pollsVotes are being counted following an early election in Thailand, called after several coalition governments collapsed giving the country three prime ministers in as many years.The election pitted those advocating far-reaching change, the People's Party, against conservatives led by incumbent PM Anutin Charnavirakul, with most polls predicting a close race between the two.When the young reformers won last time, the military-appointed senate barred them from forming a government and the constitutional court dissolved the party. Powerful, unelected forces have repeatedly intervened to block parties challenging Thailand's status quo. Results will become clear around 22:00 local time (15:00 GMT).The People's Party is facing a strong challenge from Anutin, who has built his once small, provincial Bhumjaithai – "Thai Pride" party – into the standard-bearer for Thai conservatives.The latest opinion polls and early vote counts suggest no party will win a majority in parliament, with Anutin expected to remain prime minister.He has played on patriotic sentiment after the two short border wars with Cambodia last year, and promising to defend the status of traditional Thai institutions like the monarchy and military. The third main contender is the Shinawatra family and its Pheu Thai – "For Thais" – party. In the past it dominated elections, with well-marketed populist policies. It has promised to create nine new millionaires – in Thai baht – every day through a national prize draw. Both Bhumjaithai and Pheu Thai have offered subsidies and cash handouts to voters.Pheu Thai, however, is expected to lose significant support in this election after its last coalition administration was accused of mishandling the conflict with Cambodia, and its patriarch, former PM Thaksin Shinawatra, was sent to jail. Getty ImagesThais were voting throughout SundayThailand's once dynamic economy has ground to a halt as political instability and the lack of structural changes worry foreign investors. Voters, meanwhile, are concerned about rising costs. "I want the economy to improve and I don't want big factories to relocate to our neighbouring countries," civil servant Phananya Bunthong told the BBC, a reference to Thailand falling behind Vietnam. The People's Party – led by Nattaphong Ruengpanyawut – is certainly promising big changes, from curbing the power of the biggest businesses and military, to streamlining the extensive bureaucracy and modernising the education system. But in Thailand, even a straight election victory may not be enough. Two previous incarnations of the People's Party were dissolved by the court, and their leaders banned from politics. They are not the only ones to have been subjected to intervention by the constitutional court, and other unelected conservative institutions. Five Pheu Thai prime ministers have been dismissed by the court since 2008, and two earlier incarnations of the party have been dissolved. But if the People's Party exceeds the 151 seats it won in 2023, it may prove difficult to bar it from forming a government. This is despite the great unease about its radical agenda in conservative and royalist circles. At that point yet more intervention by the courts or other bodies is expected to weaken or disable it as a political force. But if Anutin and Bhumjaithai can match or exceed the seat total of the reformists, with the conservative establishment behind him he is very likely to remain prime minister. Besides the election, Thais are also voting in a referendum on whether to reform the 2017 constitution, which was drafted under military rule in 2017 – many Thais and critics of the charter believe it gives too much power to unelected forces like the senate, "handcuffing" the country's democracy. "I want change. I don't want things to be the same," 28-year-old Kittitat Daengkongkho told the BBC. That, in effect, was the choice Thai voters were presented with in this election: sweeping change, or more of the same.AsiaThailand
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