Quick navigation:
List of forums
Gay Thailand
Gay Cambodia
Gay Vietnam
Gay World
Everything Else
FAQ & Help
Results 1 to 4 of 4

Thread: Thai PM defends cabinet as ministers await royal approval

  1. #1
    Forum's veteran lonelywombat's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    3,924
    Liked
    228

    Thai PM defends cabinet as ministers await royal approval

    Thai PM defends cabinet as ministers await royal approval


    December 20, 2008 - 6:43PM Saturday Thai Time


    New Thai premier Abhisit Vejjajiva has defended his cabinet against accusations that top jobs were going to unseasoned politicians, as the nation awaits royal approval of the ministerial line-up.

    Abhisit has vowed to bring reconciliation to Thailand and boost an economy battered by six months of protests against the last government, which ended on December 3 after a court dissolved the ruling People Power Party (PPP).

    Oxford-educated Abhisit was voted in by parliament on December 15 with the help of defecting MPs, but the Democrat Party leader's cabinet has already hit a snag with business leaders criticising some ministers as inexperienced.

    Local media reported that the outcry prompted a last-minute change of industry minister, before the list went to the revered king for royal approval late Friday ahead of the official announcement of the line-up.

    Speaking at a Democrat Party retreat on the southern island of Samui, British-born Abhisit urged members not to engage in infighting.

    A number of key posts have gone to non-Democrat MPs to appease Abhisit's hastily-formed coalition, angering some party veterans.

    "It is normal that there are disappointed people in the party, but this is coalition government," Abhisit said.

    "If I pick ministers who business people want then my government's stability would be in jeopardy ... The top priority of this government is to revive the economy and create reconciliation."

    Since May, Thailand has been beset by increasingly disruptive protests by the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD).

    The PAD accused the now-defunct PPP of being disloyal to the monarchy and of running Thailand on behalf of Thaksin Shinawatra, the premier ousted in a 2006 coup who lives in exile abroad to escape corruption charges.

    PAD protests reached their peak at the end of November when thousands of its supporters occupied Bangkok's two main airports for about a week, stranding up to 350,000 passengers and causing massive economic damage.

    The group only ended its siege after the PPP was dissolved over vote fraud charges related to elections it won one year ago, allowing the Democrats to win over former PPP lawmakers and small parties to form the government.

    Abhisit has said he wants to bring stability back to the kingdom after the protests and has tried to reach out to Thaksin's supporters, but some of his reported choices for cabinet posts have cast doubt on those promises.

    Kasit Piromya, slated as the new foreign minister, was a vocal supporter of the PAD and took to the stage repeatedly during its six-month protest campaign to criticise the government.

    The Democrat Party has already been accused of tacitly backing the PAD, while opponents have accused the courts and the army of staging a "silent coup" to get the establishment-friendly Democrats into power.

    Supporters of Thaksin and the PPP, which won post-coup elections a year ago, feel they have been robbed of their democratic rights and have vowed to hold a massive rally on December 28 ahead of Abhisit's policy address to parliament.

    "This government has no right to rule -- you can see minister positions have been awarded to capitalists, the PAD and the military, who helped the Democrats into power," said pro-Thaksin leader Jatuporn Prompan.

    "We will move to parliament to demonstrate there, but we will not seal off and block lawmakers from entering," he added.

    Thaksin infuriated elements of the old elite in the palace, military and bureaucracy -- the PAD's core support base -- who saw his popularity as a drain on their power.

    But the urbane Abhisit, who is known to friends by the western name Mark, has repeatedly failed to connect to Thaksin's support base among the poor, and came a distant second to the PPP in the 2007 elections.

    ┬й 2008 AFP

    Wombat : an Australian marsupial that eats,roots and leaves

  2. #2
    Guest

    Re: Thai PM defends cabinet as ministers await royal approva

    Quote Originally Posted by lonelywombat

    December 20, 2008 - 6:43PM Saturday Thai Time

    A number of key posts have gone to non-Democrat MPs to appease Abhisit's hastily-formed coalition, angering some party veterans.

    But the urbane Abhisit, who is known to friends by the western name Mark, has repeatedly failed to connect to Thaksin's support base among the poor, and came a distant second to the PPP in the 2007 elections.

    ┬й 2008 AFP
    Much as I said looked likely in another topic, LW:

    "Abhisit does little to inspire confidence and display strong leadership, which is what is needed when the coalition partners have nothing in common but their desire to remain in power at any cost - preferably without the need for an election! He is really only governing at the whim of the minor parties, who consequently now have far more power than they merit and who clearly intend to make the most of it."

    He's not been in power for a week, and the in-fighting has already started.

  3. #3
    Guest
    Did I once hear that someone has a TG reservation for the 29th?

  4. #4
    Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Ponbkk
    Did I once hear that someone has a TG reservation for the 29th?
    Are you talking about the kind of person who if he wanted to fly, business class persons would be bumped down to tourist for?

    I speak as the ex-partner of someone who was on such a flight and got bumped down.

    I really don't think political events are planned to the point of airline reservations.

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
About us
Sawatdee Network is the set of websites for (and about) gay community of Thailand, travelers and tourists in Thailand and in South East Asia.
Please visit us at:
2004-2017 © Sawatdee Gay Thailand - Sawatdee Network