Thai King inaugurates Parliament as Move Forward looks to lead new government

Move Forward Party leader and prime ministerial candidate Pita Limjaroenrat reporting for duty at the Thai Parliament in Bangkok, on June 27. PHOTO: REUTERS

BANGKOK – Thailand’s King Maha Vajiralongkorn inaugurated the opening of Parliament on Monday, setting the stage for an attempt by the progressive Move Forward party to form a government after its surprise election win six weeks ago.

The King, accompanied by his wife, Queen Suthida, reminded the rows of white-uniformed MPs of their duty to represent the people of Thailand.

“The progress of the nation will be up to your intellectual ability and your honesty,” he said in brief prepared remarks. “If everyone realises this, the work will achieve success smoothly.”

It was the first time the King has opened Parliament in its new home, a gigantic structure on Bangkok’s riverside.

Move Forward won huge support from youth voters and the capital Bangkok, campaigning overwhelmingly on social media on an anti-establishment platform that could complicate its effort to win enough support to form a coalition government.

It will team up in Parliament with the populist heavyweight Pheu Thai Party after the two parties won the lion’s share of the House seats, trouncing parties allied with a royalist military that has controlled the government since a 2014 coup.

But underscoring the challenge ahead, just hours away from Parliament convening, Pheu Thai and Move Forward were still at loggerheads over who would get the position of House Speaker, a pivotal post that could determine the passage of flagship legislation and timing of key votes.

They are part of an eight-party alliance and have played down talk of a rift over the Speaker post, which must be decided in the coming days.

“Pheu Thai has concluded on the matter, and choosing the House Speaker tomorrow has a definite direction. We will not let the public down,” Pheu Thai lawmaker Suthin Klangsaeng told reporters.

But a Move Forward-led government is not a certainty, analysts say. 

Mr Ben Kiatkwankul, a partner at government affairs advisory Maverick Consulting Group, said: “Overcoming the House Speaker issue would just be the beginning.”

Once chosen, the Speaker must table a joint session of Parliament to decide on a prime minister, which requires the votes of more than half of the 750 members of the bicameral legislature.

The alliance is backing Move Forward leader Pita Limjaroenrat, 42, to become premier. The alliance has 312 seats, and Mr Pita needs 376 votes to secure the post.

He will need 64 more votes from either rival parties or members of a conservative-leaning Senate appointed under the military who have previously locked horns with Move Forward over some of its policies.

Mr Pita last week said he had secured enough support in the Senate.

“Worst-case, they become a formidable opposition... No matter how it turns out, it is not the end of Move Forward and democratic forces,” he said. REUTERS

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