Thai court delays decision on Move Forward Party’s dissolution case
The pro-democracy Move Forward Party stunned the Thai establishment in last year’s polls by winning 14 million votes and 151 parliamentary seats.
Move Forward has since been weighed down by court cases driven through by conservative rivals rattled by the party’s popular call for root-and-branch reform of the economy and power structure.
The dissolution case was brought by the Election Commission alleging the call to amend the tough royal defamation law – known as 112 – was tantamount to an attempt to topple the monarchy, Thailand’s apex institution.
“We are going to consider this case on Tuesday (June 18),” the court said in a statement, without giving a date for a verdict.
Move Forward denies the allegation, describing it as the latest ruse by an alarmed and unpopular conservative power base to weaken a pro-democracy cause they can only curb through court rulings and coups.
Thailand, a constitutional monarchy, has seen 13 coups in just over 90 years, driven by a royalist establishment which refuses to cede its interests especially after losses at the ballot box. The Constitutional Court has also played an integral role in banning parties and political leaders.
“We are as close as we ever have been to breaking the cycle,” Pita told This Week in Asia earlier this month. “We will just have to go with the flow,” he added, of the court ruling.
While the pro-democracy movement remains bullish over its long-term momentum, dissolution would be another hammer blow to the hopes of a public which has signalled its desire for major reform of one of Asia’s least equal societies.
Pita and other key executives could also face a decade-long ban from politics and further legal moves to dilute their political pull.
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Former Thai PM Thaksin to