Thailand’s Anutin Faces No-Confidence Threat as Scam Scandals Deepen
- Saw Kyaw Oo
- Nov 18
- 1 min read
Amid the drumbeats of military conflict with Cambodia, Thailand’s political environment is evidently unruly and unsettled. The minority government of Anutin Charnvirakul, the third prime minister from the third largest-winning party since the latest national election in May 2023, is hard-pressed to stay in office beyond the four-month “Memorandum of Agreement” between his Bhumjaithai Party (BJT) and the People’s Party (PP), the largest camp in the national assembly.
As pressure mounts from a planned no-confidence motion in December and explosive corruption allegations against cabinet members related to scam networks and cyberfraud, Anutin may be forced to bring forward the election from the anticipated end of March next year, despite his playing up nationalism over the Thai-Cambodian border dispute.
Following the dissolution of the PP’s predecessor, the Move Forward Party, and the removal of the second-largest poll winner, Pheu Thai Party’s Srettha Thavisin, from the premiership in August 2023 and Paetongtarn Shinawatra a year later, Anutin took the helm of a stopgap administration. Despite the four-month MoA with PP, the Anutin cabinet comprising old-style unsavory politicians from provincial patronage networks appeared set to stay in public office where they are able to gain from pork-barrelling projects ahead of the next poll, which is due by May 2027.





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