A legal showdown that could oust embattled Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha reaches the country’s constitutional court this week, threatening fresh political turmoil for the kingdom just months before national elections.
The former general has clung on to office through major anti-government protests in 2020, a bruising pandemic, a faltering economy and scores of political near-misses – but now the very constitution whose design he oversaw is being used against him.
Opponents of the 68-year-old – who seized control in a coup – are agitating for his removal under rules limiting a prime minister to a maximum of eight years in office, a threshold they say he will reach Wednesday.
While the outcome is uncertain, many observers think the court will rule in Prayut’s favour.
But supporters say he has been the premier from 2017 – when the current army-drafted constitution was implemented – or in 2019 when he controversially won much-delayed national polls.
Opposition parties have asked the constitutional court to rule on when Prayut’s term ends, and on Wednesday, the judges are expected to say whether they will consider the case.
If it accepts the case, the court could suspend Prayut from office.
The former general – who has held on to power with a tenacity few anticipated – appears unruffled by the latest drama.
“Let the court decide,” he told opponents before he appeared outside parliament, brandishing a “rock on” hand sign at bemused reporters.
The court has played a key role at important moments in the upheavals that have convulsed Thai politics over the last 20 years, cancelling general election results in 2006 and 2014.
“I would not be surprised if the verdict of the Constitutional Court would be in favour of Prayut,” political analyst Napisa Waitoolkiat at Naresuan University told AFP.
Such a decision, anticipated by many, could see him remain prime minister until 2025 or 2027 – if he and his Palang Pracharat party can win re-election.
The kingdom is experiencing one of the lowest growth rates in the region, with the resumption of international tourism failing to lift the economy from the doldrums.
“Uncle Tu”, as Prayut is known, has never enjoyed widespread popularity, and Thailand’s years-long economic battering has only exacerbated a public sense of stagnation.
Earlier this year, the kingdom’s royalist-military elite were spooked when Chadchart Sittipunt, an ex-minister of the opposition Pheu Thai party, won a landslide victory in the Bangkok governor election.
With a general election due by March next year, the prime minister’s dismal popularity – with the candidate linked to him taking only eight per cent of votes – is setting off alarm bells for his own MPs.
“If you see the behaviour of these politicians, they are not paying attention to the government now. They are more concerned about the next election,” political analyst Waitoolkiat said.
A recent National Institute of Development Administration survey found two-thirds of 1,300 people polled wanted Prayut gone immediately.
Protesters are expected to hit the streets from Tuesday evening demanding Prayut quit, and police have already placed shipping containers to protect streets around government buildings.
But Prayut rode out months of street protests in Bangkok in 2020 and has survived four no-confidence motions in parliament. Many believe he is determined to stay on to host the high-profile APEC summit in Bangkok in November.