Analysts say Sunday’s election marks a sharp rightward shift for Thailand after a quarter-century of pro-democracy forces winning at the ballot box.
The reformist People’s Party, which won the popular vote in 2023, slid to a distant second with a projected 118 seats, positioning it as the main opposition in a parliament that now leans decisively conservative.
Indeed, the result points to “an electoral right-wing turn” consolidating conservative control, according to Paul Chambers, a political scientist at Singapore’s ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute.
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