Pheu Thai gains backing from rival party to form government

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The United Thai Nation Party, which fielded ex-coup leader Prayut Chan-o-cha as its PM candidate in the May polls, said it will back Pheu Thai.

The United Thai Nation Party, which fielded former coup leader Prayut Chan-o-cha as its prime ministerial candidate in the May polls, said it will back Pheu Thai.

AFP

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- Thailand’s Pheu Thai Party on Thursday gained support from a rival military-backed party, potentially boosting it in its bid to form a government ahead of a prime ministerial vote in Parliament next week.

The United Thai Nation Party or UTN, the party that fielded former coup leader Prayut Chan-o-cha as its prime ministerial candidate in the May election, said on Thursday it will help Pheu Thai form a government.

Mr Prayut, who is currently caretaker Prime Minister, first came to power in a coup against a Pheu Thai-led government in 2014.

“United Thai party will join the government with Pheu Thai,” UTN spokesman Akaradej Wongpitakroj told reporters on Thursday.

“We agree to join in order to move the country forward together.”

Thailand has spent more than five months under a caretaker government after the leader of the election-winning Move Forward Party was

blocked twice by conservative and pro-army opponents

in his bid to become premier.

Move Forward’s former ally, the second-placed Pheu Thai Party, earlier in August

took over efforts to form a government.

Previous Pheu Thai governments, backed by former premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s family, were ousted by military coups in 2006 and 2014, when the party’s interests clashed with the country’s powerful old money elites and royalist military.

Pheu Thai is set to nominate real estate tycoon Srettha Thavisin for premier in a vote scheduled for next Tuesday and needs the support of more than half the bicameral legislature – including the military-appointed Senate.

The party has managed to gather the support of 13 other political parties, but it will need some support from the unelected Senate. REUTERS

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