BANGKOK, Feb 8 (Reuters) - Thai Prime Minister
Anutin Charnvirakul's Bhumjaithai Party won a clear victory in Sunday's
general election,
raising the prospect that a more stable coalition may now succeed in bringing an end to a period of prolonged
political instability.
Anutin set the stage for the
snap election in mid-December during a border conflict between Thailand and Cambodia, a move political analysts said appeared to be timed by the conservative leader to
cash in on surging nationalism. It is a gamble that
paid off for a prime minister, who - having taken over after premier Paetongtarn Shinawatra of the populist Pheu Thai party was ousted over the Cambodian crisis - then dissolved parliament less than 100 days later. "Bhumjaithai's victory today is a victory for all Thais, whether you voted for Bhumjaithai Party or not," Anutin told a press briefing. "We have to do the utmost to serve the Thai people to our full ability." With nearly 95% of polling stations reporting, preliminary results released by the election commission showed the Bhumjaithai Party winning about 192 seats, compared to 117 for the progressive
People's Party, and 74 for the once-dominant Pheu Thai party. A handful of other parties won a combined 117 spots in the 500-seat parliament, according to a Reuters calculation of election commission data.
'POWER TO GOVERN'
When Anutin dissolved parliament in December, he cited dysfunction and infighting between rival parties as making it impossible to lead a minority government.
While the Bhumjaithai Party was unlikely to win a majority outright, the results suggest it is in a strong position to push through campaign pledges, said Napon Jatusripitak, a political scientist at the Bangkok-based Thailand Future think-tank. Those include implementing a consumer subsidy programme and ditching an agreement with Cambodia over maritime claims. "For the first time in a long time, we will likely have a government that has sufficient effective power to govern," he said. "We are seeing what I would describe as a marriage of convenience between technocrats, conservative elites, and traditional politicians."