Thailand’s acting government moves to dissolve parliament


Anutin Charnvirakul, Bhumjaithai Party’s leader and prime ministerial candidate, leaves after a press conference at the parliament, in Bangkok, Thailand, on September 3, 2025. CHALINEE THIRASUPA / REUTERS

Thailand’s acting prime minister moved to dissolve parliament on Wednesday, September 3, his party said, after the largest opposition group backed a rival candidate to lead the country. The decision – a potentially legally fraught one – could see the kingdom hold fresh elections before the year’s end, just two years after it last went to the polls in May 2023.

A power vacuum has consumed Thailand’s top office since Friday, when Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra was ousted by the Constitutional Court over an ethics breach.

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Her Pheu Thai party – still governing in a caretaker capacity – had courted the power-broking opposition People’s Party to back its new candidate for prime minister. But the People’s Party instead declared its support for conservative tycoon Anutin Charnvirakul.

Whether a caretaker government has the power to dissolve parliament is a hotly debated question. But according to the Thai constitution, if the king approves the dissolution of parliament, an election must take place between 45 to 60 days later.

The People’s Party also said its backing of Anutin was conditional on house dissolution within four months – meaning his elevation to office would likely lead to fresh polls, albeit on a later timescale.

Covid and cannabis

The People’s Party pledged its 143-strong parliamentary bloc to back Anutin, heir to a construction engineering fortune, who told reporters it was “the duty of MPs” to vote him into office. “From this point onward forming a government is essential, and we understand the party is seeking a way to resolve the crises,” he said.

Anutin previously served as deputy prime minister, interior minister and health minister – in 2022 delivering on a promise to legalise cannabis.

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Charged with the tourist-dependent kingdom’s Covid-19 response, he accused Westerners of spreading the virus and was forced to apologise after a backlash. But with parliamentary dissolution pending, it is unclear whether he will make it to the top office.

Pheu Thai is the current electoral vehicle of the Shinawatra dynasty, which has for two decades jousted with the kingdom’s pro-monarchy, pro-military elite. But their influence is in decline, analysts say, their move to dissolve parliament more evidence of flagging momentum.

Anutin’s Bhumjaithai Party was a key coalition backer of former prime minister Paetongtarn but abandoned their pact to govern this summer over her conduct during a border row with Cambodia. That same dispute saw Paetongtarn sacked by the Constitutional Court on Friday.

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Only candidates nominated as potential premiers in the 2023 election are eligible to serve as prime minister, and a streak of turmoil had seen the number of potential leaders whittled down to just five.

Le Monde with AFP

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