'Speaking truly from my heart, I want him to come back to lead the country again,' food shop owner Kasem Puapan said on Wednesday in Bangpa-In, a small industrial town 60 kilometres north of Bangkok.
'If there is a new election, I will still vote for his party,' she said.
Like many Thais in the countryside or small towns beyond the bright lights of the capital, she believes the economy has stagnated since Thaksin, now living in exile, was removed from office in a 2006 coup.
Ms Kasem said her shop has recently lost half of its usual income as customers have tightened their belts.
'Now I rarely have to watch my shop. I spend more time on social activities,' she said.
On Tuesday, the Constitutional Court dissolved the ruling People Power Party (PPP), the successor to Thaksin's banned Thai Rak Thai party for vote fraud in an election a year ago, and banned its top leaders, including Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, Thaksin's brother-in-law, from politics.
The latest ruling and Thaksin's graft conviction in October - meaning he is now officially a convicted criminal on the run - has done little to dent the telecoms billionaire's reputation as a no-nonsense leader who gets things done.
'I like a leader who can deliver what he has promised,' Ms Kasem said.
Much of his popularity stems from his creation of a low-cost public health system, as well as cheap credit for farmers and small businesses. His critics say the schemes were poorly thought out and risked pushing the government into the red.
People at Bangpa-in, home to several industrial parks and major factories, are now worried about the fallout from global economic slowdown and want a government that will hear the pain and come to their help.
'During Thaksin government, we used to sell a cow for 11,000-12,000 baht,' said Mr Thongchai Petra, owner of a small construction firm as well as a farm in the nearby province.
'Now it fetches only 7,000 baht. That is barely enough for the animal feed,' he said.
Others said they were worried about the possibility of job losses.
'If the economy continues like this, who will invest here,' said Mr Wilasinee Wong-amart, whose family owns apartment buildings for factory workers.
'They will lose their jobs and then who will rent my rooms?' -- REUTERS