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Jonathan’s headSoutheast Asia correspondent in Bangkok
The Constitutional Court of Thailand struck again, removing another prime minister.
An honest intervention group in the country out of nine appointed judges has ruled that the polynomett Shinovatta violated the ethical standards in a phone call, which she had in June with the Cambodian leader Huns, who later leaked.
In it, the polytongarne could hear the reconciliation against the border dispute of its countries and criticizing one of its own commanders of the army.
She defended her conversation, stating that she tried to make a diplomatic breakthrough with Huun Sen, an old friend of her father toxin Shinovatt, and said the conversation should remain confidential.
The leak was harmful and deeply awkward for her and her feu parties. This called for her to resign when her largest coalition partner left the government, leaving her with a slender majority.
In July, seven of the nine judges in court voted in favor of suspending a polyttendant, a stock that suggested that it would suffer the same fate as four predecessors. Thus, Friday’s decision was not a surprise.
Paetongtarn is the fifth Thai Prime Minister who will be dismissed in this court and all of them from the administrations supported by her parents.
This caused a broad belief in Thailand that it almost always rules those that are considered as a threat to conservative, royal forces.
The court also banned 112 political parties, many of them are small, but including two pre -incarnations of the Thailand Thailand, and move forward, the Reformer movement that won the last 2023 elections.
In several other countries, this political life is so strict as the policy of the judicial system.
In this case, it was the leak of the telephone conversation.
It is unclear why Hong Saint decided to burn his friendship with the Shinovat family. He reacted angrily to the comments of the polytongarne, calling on the use of Cambodian leadership in social media to push his arguments “non -professional”.
Hong Saint called it a “unprecedented insult” that made him “put the truth.”
But his decision caused a political crisis in Thailand, igniting tensions over their border, which broke out in a five -day war last month, which killed more than 40 people.
Now the Thai Constitution demands from the parliament deputies to choose a new Prime Minister from a very limited list.
Each side had to name the three candidates before the last election, and the Fiu Tai was used two after the court’s dismissal was dismissed last year.
Their third candidate, Nitiser Chaikos, the former minister and the party, but has little public profile and has poor health. An alternative will be Anunine Chernvirakul, a former Interior Minister whose bhumjita party came out of the ruling coalition, allegedly over the leakage of a telephone call.
The relationship between both parties is intense now, and Anunin had to count on the fau -ta, which still has many places to form a government that is unlikely to be a recipe for stability.
The largest party in the parliament, 143 deputies who were previously moved forward and reformed as a People’s Party, promised not to join any coalition, but to remain in the opposition until new elections are held.
The new elections seem to be a clear way out of the current political porridge, but the Fair Thai does not want it. Two years later, he was unable to fulfill his promises to revive the economy.
For her whole youth, the inexperienced polytongarne could not establish any real authorities over the country, and most Thais believes that her father makes all the great decisions.
But the toxin Shinovat seems to have lost its magical touch. The PHU Thai Party signature policy in the last election, the digital wallet that would put B10,000 ($ 308; £ 178) in the pocket of every adult Thailand, hidden and was widely criticized as ineffective.
Other grand plans to legalize casinos and build a “land-brim” that binding the Indian and Pacific, did not go anywhere.
At a time when Thai nationalist sentiments were fired on the border war from Cambodia, the long-standing family of Shinovitra-Hati, and now a broken-friendly Huna Hauna has intensified the suspicion of conservative circles that they would always put their business interests before nations.
The party’s popularity was immersed, and most likely it would have lost many 140 places in the elections.
For more than two decades, it has been an unmatched electoral force that dominates Thai politics.
It is difficult to understand how it is again restored.