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Thai court throws out case on election winner’s thwarted bid to become PM

Bangkok (AFP) – Thailand’s Constitutional Court on Wednesday refused to hear a case on election winner Pita Limjaroenrat’s thwarted bid to become prime minister, clearing the way for a new leadership vote in Parliament.

The ruling brings Thailand a step closer to potentially ending the political deadlock that has gripped the kingdom since the general election in May.

“The Constitutional Court has agreed unanimously to not accept the case for a hearing,” the court said in a statement.

On Wednesday afternoon, House speaker Wan Muhamad Noor Matha announced the next vote for prime minister was slated for August 22.

Pita’s Move Forward Party (MFP) won the most seats in the May poll, riding a wave of support from young and urban Thais to end nearly a decade of army-backed rule.

But the Harvard-educated 42-year-old was defeated in his bid to become PM by a nexus of conservative forces spooked by his pledges to reform royal insult laws and business monopolies.

Pita dropped out of the running after parliament rejected him in a first prime ministerial vote and then denied him a second.

The case thrown out by the court on Wednesday had centred on the constitutionality of parliament refusing Pita a second vote.

The Pheu Thai party of exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, which came second in the election, is now set to lead a multi-party coalition government without the participation of MFP.

Pheu Thai will nominate business tycoon Srettha Thavisin for prime minister, and the party said it is confident he will get enough votes to be approved.

To become prime minister, a candidate must be approved by a majority of both houses of Parliament – the 500 elected MPs and the 250 senators appointed under the last junta.

Pita could not muster enough support from senators, and several parties said they would play no part in any government that included MFP.

Last week the Bhumjaithai party – which was part of the outgoing military-backed government – joined Pheu Thai’s new coalition.

Bhumjaithai had previously insisted it would not join a coalition containing MFP.

Pheu Thai is seen as a vehicle for the Shinawatra political clan, whose members include two former prime ministers ousted by military coups.

Thaksin, 74, has said he will return to Thailand in the coming weeks – despite facing multiple criminal cases he said are politically motivated.

Thailand’s Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat delivers a speech at the Parliament in Bangkok, Thailand. PHOTO: XINHUA
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