With Thaksin jailed, Thailand’s Pheu Thai turns to nephew in poll fight back
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Associate Professor Yodchanan Wongsawat, the nephew and son of former prime ministers, is Pheu Thai’s leading candidate for the top job in the Feb 8 general election.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BANGKOK - With general elections just months away and its billionaire patriarch in prison
Associate Professor Yodchanan Wongsawat, 46, the nephew and son of former prime ministers, is Pheu Thai’s leading candidate for the top job in the Feb 8 general election
“I’m the very small guy, but I’m on the shoulder of a giant,” said Prof Yodchanan, referring to the Shinawatra family, which has yielded four prime ministers in two decades, including his uncle, Thaksin Shinawatra, and father, Mr Somchai Wongsawat.
A dominating figure in contemporary Thai politics, Thaksin was jailed for one year
Thaksin’s daughter, Ms Paetongtarn Shinawatra, was ousted as prime minister by a court order in August over a leaked June telephone call
Fighting erupted weeks later and flared up again on Dec 8
Pheu Thai’s support has nosedived during the upheaval, and in December polled at only 11.04 per cent in a nationwide survey conducted by the National Institute of Development Administration, from 13.96 per cent in September and 28.05 per cent in March.
Thailand was plunged into an earlier-than-expected election season after Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul dissolved Parliament earlier in December
Pheu Thai’s record of backing outsiders
Prof Yodchanan says he believes that Pheu Thai’s political legacy, including populist policies like universal healthcare and cash handouts that won it years of support among people in the country’s rural areas, can still help.
“We still believe we can win,” he told Reuters in an interview on Dec 16. “If we can translate (policies) and make the people know that vision, people would protect us.”
An engineer by training with a PhD from the University of Texas in Arlington, Prof Yodchanan spent most of his adult life in academia and is currently a professor in biomedical engineering at Bangkok’s Mahidol University.
Although a political novice, having served only as an adviser on tech-related policies to the last Pheu Thai-led government, Prof Yodchanan says he plans to bring his experience in managing complex scientific and multidisciplinary projects to politics.
Over the decades, the Pheu Thai party has nominated political novices for prime minister and successfully propelled them into office, including Yingluck Shinawatra in 2011, and Mr Srettha Thavisin and Ms Paetongtarn Shinawatra in 2023
Amid the ongoing conflict with Cambodia
Analysts say the next election could result in no clear majority for any of the parties contesting.
Prof Yodchanan indicated he was open to working in a coalition government.
“We want to win, obviously,” he said, “but if we cannot, we can pair with the party that would have the same intention.” REUTERS

