|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
Thailands right-wing populist wins national elections
By Peter Symonds
10 February 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Thailands autocratic prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra
won a second term of office at national elections held last Sunday.
While the results are yet to be finalised, his Thai Rak Thai (Thais
Love Thai) party is expected to win around 375 of the 500 parliamentary
seats. The huge majority will allow Thaksin to dispense with his
coalition partners, amend the constitution and make the government
immune from opposition censure motions.
Thaksin, a former police colonel, is one of the countrys
richest men. He built his business empire and a personal fortune
of $1.4 billion by securing lucrative monopolies and state contracts
under previous military regimes. Thaksin formed the Thai Rak Thai
(TRT) party before the 2001 elections and defeated the Democratic
Party-led government by appealing to those hard-hit by the 1997-98
Asian financial crisis, particularly the rural poor.
In the recent campaign, Thaksin went one step further, promising
to end poverty in his next term. He shamelessly declared:
You have a prime minister who is a capitalist, and so I
am good at finding capital for people. His government has
been buoyed by average economic growth rates of 6.1 percent over
the past three years, in large part due to growing trade with
China and the US.
Thaksins popularity among the poor is largely due to
a series of handouts: a $2.3 billion fund for village development,
debt cancellation for farmers, low interest loans and cheap medical
care. The viability of these schemes, however, depends on continuing
high growth rates. Commenting in the International Herald Tribune,
economist Wichai Turongpun warned that Thais were hooked on easy
credit, increased rural debt and strained state coffers. Should
a future government stop the program, then we will have trouble
because the villages are deep in debt, he noted.
While welcoming his reelection, economic analysts have urged
Thaksin to press ahead with privatisation and further pro-market
reforms. Such measures will not only further exacerbate social
inequality. They will threaten Thaksins support among layers
of business seeking government protection and cheap loans. The
Economist Intelligence Unit recently noted: The Thaksin
administration is particularly vulnerable to allegations of cronyism
partly because the cabinet includes a high number of people with
business interests or connections.
Philippe Sachs, an analyst for the Standard & Poors credit
rating agency, raised concerns about the concentration of power
in Thaksins hands. If these fears are realised and
it resulted in an increase in corruption and a marked rise in
populist policies, Thailands creditworthiness could suffer,
he warned. Among the demands of capital are calls to rein in the
government budget and to slash subsidies on oilmeasures
that will erode the social position of the countrys poor.
The election was a devastating blow to the opposition Democratic
Party, which appealed to voters to give it 201 seatsenough
to keep a check on Thaksin. It is likely to win only 91. On Tuesday,
party leader Banyat Bantadtan took responsibility for the result
and resigned his post. The Mahachon Partya recently formed
breakaway from the Democratic Partyis likely to win only
one seat. Its leader Sanan Kachornprasart announced his intention
to retire from politics.
The low vote for the Democratic Party is a product of a number
of factors, including Thaksins control over a substantial
section of the mediaboth government and through his own
companiesand blatant vote buying. One poll estimated that
some 10 billion baht or $US260 million was spent in bribes to
voters during the campaign.
More fundamentally, however, the Democratic Party failed to
offer any political alternative to Thaksin. The party, the oldest
in Thailand, built its support, particularly among sections of
the urban middle class, through its limited opposition to the
countrys previous military regimes. It came to power in
the immediate aftermath of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis
and is still identified with the austerity measures implemented
at the behest of the IMF and World Bank.
Anti-democratic measures
It was only in the predominantly Muslim south of the country,
which Thaksin has placed under martial rule in order to suppress
separatist sentiment, that the Democratic Party made any gains.
It took 10 of the 11 seats in the three southern Thai provinces
while the TRT lost all six of its seats. The TRTs former
allyChart Thaitook one southern seat in the tsunami-devastated
area of Phang Nga. Chart Thai expects to win 30 seats overall.
The hostility to Thaksin in the south is a direct product of
the ruthless methods that have been used against separatist rebels.
Last October, the security forces provoked an international outcry
over the killing of at least 86 demonstrators in the Tak Bai district
of Narathiwat province. Six were shot dead and 80 more died of
suffocation after they were thrown into military trucks on top
of each other and with their hands tied behind the back.
More than 550 people have died over the past year either at
the hands of the military or armed separatist groups. Thaksin
has responded to rebel attacks with increased military repression.
According to the Independent newspaper, the army sent an
extra 10,000 troops into the southern areas prior to the election.
While both Washington and Bangkok deny any US direct involvement
in military operations in the Muslim south, there is no doubt
that ties exist. Thaksin backed the Bush administrations
war on terrorism, dispatched 450 Thai troops to Iraq
and established closer relations between Thai and US intelligence
agencies. When alleged terrorist Riduan Isamuddin, also known
as Hambali, was captured in southern Thailand in August 2003,
he was immediately handed over to US authorities and is still
being held at a secret location.
The repression in southern Thailand is just the sharpest expression
of Thaksins anti-democratic methods. In February 2003, his
administration launched a vicious law-and-order campaign
to crack down on drugs. A list of thousands of alleged drug
dealers was announced along with an ultimatum to report
to the police or face the consequences. In the space of three
months, more than 2,000 people were shot dead in what were widely
believed to be police-organised extra-judicial killings. Despite
protests by human rights organisations, there was no serious government
investigation into the deaths.
The latest report on Thailand by the US-based Human Rights
Watch organisation pointed to Thaksins stifling control
of the media and clamp down on protests. Over the past three
years, the Thai Journalists Association and the Thai Broadcasters
Association have documented more than 20 cases in which news editors
and journalists were dismissed or transferred, or their work tampered
with, to appease the government. The authorities have arbitrarily
used work permits or visa renewals as effective tools for pressuring
foreign journalists.
Brad Adams, Asia director for Human Rights Watch, commented
after the elections: Thailand has gone from being a beacon
of freedom and respect for human rights in the region to being
a country of high concern. Much of the steady progress Thailand
had made in the last decade has been rolled back under Thaksins
tenure.
Even in the 1990s, Thailand was never a beacon of freedom.
The military, which dominated the country for much of the twentieth
century, was compelled to pull back and concede elections after
a wave of public protests in 1991. The emergence of the right-wing
populist Thaksin is a sure sign that the ruling class is once
again contemplating police state methods to deal with rising social
tensions.
See Also:
Thai government puts tourism
ahead of the poor in tsunami relief effort
[17 January 2005]
Outrage over murder
of Thai Muslim demonstrators
[2 November 2004]
Thousands dead as
a result of Thailands war on drugs
[9 May 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |