Thai Parliament votes for new PM on Monday
Democrat Party secretary-general Suthep Thaugsuban (left) and Puea Pandin executive Rarnongrak Nuanchawee greet each other as members of five political parties and one faction gather to hold a meeting in Bangkok before announcing they formed a new coalition.
Thailand's Parliament will elect a new Prime Minister on Monday, a Democrat Party official said yesterday, as both the main party in the outgoing government and the Democrats, the main opposition, claimed they could win. "The king has approved the request and the House Speaker has set a date to vote for a new Prime Minister Monday," Democrat Secretary-General Suthep Thaugsuban said.
A vote is needed because Somchai Wongsawat was forced to step down as Prime Minister last week when his party and two others in the ruling coalition were disbanded by the courts for electoral fraud in a general election a year ago.
Mr Somchai and several ministers have been banned from politics for five years but other lawmakers have simply transferred to new "shell" parties.
The Democrat Party has enough support from four small partners in the previous six-party coalition to ensure that its leader, Abhisit Vejjajiva, becomes Prime Minister, Mr Suthep said.
The Democrats and their new allies claim to have 260 votes in the 480-seat Parliament.
Puea Thai, the new name for the biggest party in the old coalition, has said it still has enough support to cobble together a coalition, although some of its own members seem to have defected.
The prospect of a new government kept the stock market in the black yesterday, following a period of turbulence during which anti-government protesters blockaded Bangkok's airports for a week until December 3, stranding hundreds of thousands of tourists. Puea Thai is the latest incarnation of a party grouping allies of Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted as prime minister by the military in a September 2006 coup and now lives in exile.
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