By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Paetongtarn
Shinawatra has been dismissed as prime minister by the Constitutional Court for
a violation of ethics after only a year in power, plunging the country and its
stuttering economy into more uncertainty.
Deputy Premier Phumtham Wechayachai and the
current Cabinet will oversee the government in a caretaker capacity until a new
prime minister is chosen by Parliament, on a date to be decided by the House
Speaker.
The Constitution does
not specify a time frame for when the Lower House must convene.
The court ruling
opens the door to a flurry of dealmaking and horse-trading between parties and
other power-brokers, with the central figure almost certain to be Ms Paetongtarn’s influential father and former premier, Mr Thaksin Shinawatra, 76, the billionaire founder of her
Pheu Thai party. With many competing interests, the process could take
time.
The stakes are high,
with the ruling coalition holding a razor-thin majority of just seven seats,
meaning any shifts in allegiance away from the alliance could be costly for
Pheu Thai and the Shinawatra political dynasty.
Who are the PM candidates?
There are five
remaining eligible candidates from those declared before the 2023 election.
Pheu Thai had three initially, but is now left
with only one, Chaikasem Nitisiri, 77, a former
justice minister and attorney-general who has kept a low profile, but has said
he is ready to step up.
Another possibility
is Anutin Charnvirakul, 58, an ambitious former
interior minister and deputy premier whose Bhumjaithai
party quit Paetongtarn’s coalition in June.
Also eligible are
current Energy Minister Pirapan Salirathavibhaga,
former deputy prime minister Jurin Laksanawisit, and
former premier Prayut Chan-o-cha, a general who led a 2014 coup against the
last Pheu Thai government. Prayut, 71, is
retired from politics and is currently a royal adviser.
What’s needed to become a PM?
A candidate needs
endorsement of 50 lawmakers before the House can vote. The backing of more than
half of the Lower House’s current 492 members – or 247 votes – is required to
become prime minister.
If the candidate
fails, the House must convene again, and the process will be repeated for any
other candidates nominated until a prime minister is chosen, with no time limit
on the process.
What are the possible scenarios?
The chances of Pheu
Thai retaining the premiership through Chaikasem will
depend largely on whether Thaksin, despite Paetongtarn’s dismissal, still has
an accommodation with Thailand’s conservative establishment, which has
far-reaching political influence and could easily torpedo his plans.

While the old guard
has a troubled history with Thaksin (pictured below), the father of the current
Prime Minister, some analysts say they may see him as the lesser of two evils.
A weakening of Thaksin’s
power could lead to an early election and open the door to the People’s Party,
a progressive and hugely popular opposition with an institutional reform agenda
that threatens the interests of conservatives and the royalist military.

While the old guard
has a troubled history with Thaksin Shinawatra,
some analysts say they may see him as the lesser of two evils.
Despite his limited
political experience, Chaikasem as premier might be
an agreeable stopgap solution, but he would struggle to deliver on reforms or
jumpstart a flat-lining economy.
Political uncertainty
could fester, and the economic outlook could remain gloomy for some time.
Other scenarios
include Bhumjaithai Party leader Anutin
as premier, who would need support from within the coalition he fled and from
the People’s Party, the largest force in Parliament, which has signaled it may
back him if he commits to an early election.
Another is an awkward
political compromise that sees the return of Prayut, who would need to work
with bitter enemy Pheu Thai.
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