Commentary: The Fed Is making Hong Kong’s billionaire landlords anxious

HONG KONG: Among those looking forward to the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate cuts, some are as anxious as&nbsp, Hong Kong’s home tycoons who are now dealing with slow home sales, unoccupied office buildings, and insubordinate tenants demanding contract renegotiations. &nbsp,

About 60 per share of listed property businesses ‘ loan is&nbsp, borrowed at floating rates. Banks &nbsp, charge New World Development an&nbsp, average 1.1 to 1.2 per cent over Hong Kong Inter-bank Offered Rate ( HIBOR ), whose movements track the fed fund rate&nbsp, because of the Hong Kong dollar peg.

A one percentage-point&nbsp, rate cut is keep chief executive officer Adrian Cheng, a third-generation heir&nbsp, from a billionaire home, HK$ 1.1 billion ( US$ 141 million ) &nbsp, and increase revenue by a third, according to Morgan Stanley quotes.

New World, &nbsp, one of Hong Kong’s most obliged engineers, paid HK$ 2.5 billion in funding costs&nbsp, in the second-half of 2023, &nbsp, eroding 44 per share of the firm’s working income. &nbsp,

But more importantly, the Fed’s easing cycle may begin to support large landowners make an investment case for the goods they try to sell, or use as collateral&nbsp, for institution money. Now, the city’s overall real estate market -&nbsp, from personal to financial to&nbsp, offices -&nbsp, suffers from bad carry, in that the rent an owner may expect to collect is nothing close to paying for financing costs.

Leasing&nbsp, out Grade-A offices, for instance, yields on average only about 3.2 per cent, not enough to cover the one-month HIBOR’s 3.9 per cent. &nbsp,

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Commentary: ‘I don’t know what stopped me’ – my dangerous brush with postpartum depression

My captivity lady, also, had no idea. A new mother might find support sooner if her partners, confinement women, and other people who are present can learn more about PPD.

I even wished I could have sat down and contemplated talking treatment. I was undoubtedly possessing naive ideas about what it meant to be a mom. When combined with maternal hormone changes and the needs of newborn treatment, the impossible expectations I placed on myself created PPD.

Unfortunately, as I attempted to do everything, I lost the family I could have been.

AWARENESS IS HAL FAR WONDERLY THE BATTLE.

Immediately, I make it a point to check on anxious friends. I carefully advise them to consider seeking help and point out where they can find mental health resources if they express stress or say they are feeling down. I tell them that there is no shame in doing this, and that doing their best for their child also means taking good care of themselves.

There is good information that a mother’s mental health powerfully influences her boy’s mental, emotional and physical well-being. Every family has a better probability of raising a child who is happy and healthy in every way because every family is well supported.

Reaching over and expressing your problem for an expectant friend may be life-saving even if you are not a family yourself.

Twenty-two years have passed since my paint with PPD, and my daughter is now a young child. She is aware of my knowledge and recognizes the need to keep an eye out if she chooses to have children in the future.

Knowledge is only half the battle that was won. We may stop more traumas from occurring if more parents openly discuss PPD.

Mother of two and a speaker for health, Jean Angus.

Where to get support:

Samaritan of Singapore Hotline: &nbsp, 1767

Institute of Mental Health’s Helpline: 6389 2222

Singapore Association for Mental Health Helpline: &nbsp, 1800 283 7019

You can also find a list of global helplines&nbsp, around. If someone you know is at quick risk, visit 24-hour emergency health services.

Those who need advice or information on breastfeeding can visit the&nbsp, Breastfeeding Mothers ‘ Support Group&nbsp, or&nbsp, Health Hub&nbsp, websites.

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A political war is heating up in the Philippines. What role is US-China rivalry playing in this?

While the Philippine economy increased by 5.6 % last year, which is the region’s fastest rate, headline inflation increased by 4.4 % in July to reach its highest level. Food prices rose to 6.7 per cent.

Foreign investment is still relatively small. And the conflict could have an impact: It was “lead to a period of political instability”, said Ibarra. ” What’s spooked investors as well as our diplomatic partners ( is ) how quickly policies can change between administrations”.

If Sara Duterte wins the 2028 presidential vote, he added, it is likely that she will remove Marcos ‘ plans.

Even up in the air, with the US presidential poll looming in November, was become US assets pledged to the Philippines. ” We wo n’t have any problems if ( Kamala ) Harris wins”, said Beleno. ” If it’s ( Donald ) Trump, then that’s another story.

” If Trump perceives that ( the US ‘ ) presence in the Philippines will only cost them money and they wo n’t gain anything, I do n’t think they’ll continue whatever promises the ( Democrats ) made.”

Therefore the Philippines would be in a” resilient place”.

” The Dutertes could use this condition to their benefit: ‘ I told you, right? China should just be a companion. Thus, we were right. … Since this supervision made a mistake, we may correct it,'” said Beleno, speculating what Duterte may say.

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‘Malaysia’s Bavaria’: Sarawak Premier Abang Johari aims to lift state’s stature through infrastructure, education

Before the next state elections scheduled for 2026, Mr. Abang Johari wants Sarawak to contribute the second-highest to Malaysia’s gross domestic product ( GDP ).

Sarawak accounted for 9.1 % of the GDP in 2023, compared to Selangor ( 25.7 % ), Kuala Lumpur ( 15.9 % ), and Johor ( 9.5 % ), according to data from the Statistics Department of Malaysia ( 29.9 % ).

Sarawak is attempting to follow nations that have made significant investments in equipment in order to promote economic growth, the Premier said.

” What Sarawak is doing now is to improve our system, because we’ve got the strength, including power, and we build our inner home connectivity”, he said, adding that the condition is working with investors to construct its economy.

” We are getting funding in Sarawak, and the advantages may be shared with the owners as well as the Sarawak state or, for that matter, Sarawak as a whole,” the statement read.

However, Mr. Abang Johari argued that Sarawak’s rapid growth and towering ambitions should not be taken as a declaration of independence, dismissing calls for the state to leave Malaysia by some Sarawak activists.

These campaigners are frustrated by what they perceive as the federal government’s ongoing failure to restore Sarawak’s right under the Malaysia Agreement of 1963, which was the legal foundation for Malaysia’s founding with Sarawak and Sabah acting as equal partners with Malaya.

The federal government acknowledged, of course, how the state operated and how things went ahead. It does n’t mean that there is an urge for us &nbsp,- some ( have this ) perception- ( to go ) on our own”, Mr Abang Johari said.

Independent TERTIARY EDUCATION

Sarawak is beginning to make its own in the form of a free training program for Sarawkians at its five state-owned institutions.

These are the Curtin University Malaysia Sarawak Campus, Swinburne University of Technology Sarawak Campus, University Technology Sarawak, Centre of Technology Excellence Sarawak, and i-CATS University College.

Local advertising had recently reported that the proposed scheme, which is anticipated to cost the government up to RM625 million, will gain about 25, 000 pupils in Sarawak’s state-owned institutions and higher-learning organizations.

The Sarawak state, nevertheless, has said that the free training will only apply to selected science and specialized fields, in line with the country’s development programs and to optimise sources.

Opposition Sarawak assembly Chong Chieng Jen, from the Democratic Action Party, questioned these instances, calling it a “lame reason”.

Is there a hidden issue with the Sarawak government’s financial condition that prevents it from funding the bank? In a statement from the August 29 Dayak Daily, he was quoted as saying.

CNA has contacted Sarawak’s Ministry of Education, Innovation and Talent for more information about the programs that will be completely subventioned and the number of individuals who will gain.

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Analysis: Renewal of landmark China-Vatican pact all but assured; mutual benefits gained despite friction

Dr Reyes noted that the improvements reflect the” major development” between both parties, perhaps as both do not promote formal relationships.

After China’s Communist Party (CCP ) took control and expelled foreign priests, Beijing cut diplomatic ties with the Holy See in 1951. Otherwise, the Vatican maintains formal ties to Taiwan, one of only a few states doing so.

Mr. Yeo made a point of mentioning that Cardinal Chow, who was in the Vatican in May, had invited Pope Francis to explore Hong Kong. He views the movement as important, aimed at reinforcing the state’s responsibility as a gate between China and the world Catholic area.

Pope Paul VI is the only pope to have traveled to Hong Kong. He stopped for three hours there in 1970, when it was a British settlement, and celebrated mass at Happy Valley racecourse.

The Hong Kong priest would not have issued this proposal on his own, without China’s approval, Mr. Yeo said in an appointment with CNA late last month.” It was an unofficial invitation, but several brow were raised.

MORE THAN MATTERS OF FAITH

According to experts interviewed by CNA, China has taken a favorable position toward enhancing relationships with the Vatican because it aligns with its wider strategic objectives of strengthening its worldwide reputation and preventing adverse representations from the West.

Dr. Reyes from HKU cited the Beijing’s invitation to Cardinal Matteo Maria Zuppi, the priest’s specific minister for peace in Ukraine, in September. The minister also met with Mr Li Hui, China’s special minister for European affairs, marking a “rare and prominent diplomatic sign”. &nbsp,

” Beijing was notably gratified, one might even say chuffed by the Vatican sending a special emissary on Ukraine ( to the country ) … ( as ) this signifies the Holy See’s recognition of China’s potential role in facilitating peace in Ukraine”, he said.

Cardinal Zuppi made visits to Kyiv, Moscow, and Washington in July as part of the Holy See’s efforts to bring Ukraine and Russia to the table of negotiations.

China has resisted calling for a ceasefire and a political solution since Russian troops invaded Ukraine in February 2022. This approach, however, has prompted American complaints that Beijing is enabling Russia’s anger.

In July, North Atlantic Treaty Organization ( NATO ) members convened in Washington, DC, and signed a declaration designating China as a “decisive enabler” of the invasion. They demanded that Beijing stop providing Moscow with “every material and social support,” including the use of dual-use materials for both civil and military purposes.

In reply, China dismissed these statements as “groundless” and asserted that it has “always been a force for peace and security”.

The Vatican’s decision to send a harmony minister to Beijing therefore serves as a counter-narrative to Western reproval, said Dr Reyes.

It does demonstrate how the Vatican is trying to function in a more rational earth. And by logical, one was, by expansion, think of it as a so-called unipolar world in which we live”, he added.

” The US does not seem to understand that the world has changed and that it’s no more a US-dominant earth, that it’s … then multi-civilisational, international.

” I think it’s exciting to me that the Vatican, to some extent, has been operating that means ( with China ).”

Mr. Yeo, Singapore’s foreign affairs minister from 2004 to 2011, asserts that China’s attempts to bolster its understanding and engagement with the West are a part of its wider plan. &nbsp,

Without mentioning the Catholic Church, the participation of bishops, and the Vatican, both for great and for bad, European and American history is unfathomable.

” I believe China’s political relations with the West will ( also hinge ) on its relationship with the Vatican”.

Dr. Michel Chambon, a research fellow with the Asia Research Institute’s faith and globalization group, believes that strengthening relations with the Vatican is in line with China’s desire to become a world power.

“( China ) cannot, for too long, treat the Catholic Church as just an enemy. Only China has formal diplomatic relations with the Vatican, and only North Korea and Afghanistan have diplomatic relations with the Vatican, which makes things extremely unpleasant. What does ( that say ) about China itself”?

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Commentary: Japan has learnt a hard lesson about US friendship

LINES HAVE BEEN CROSSED

From the outset, Nippon Steel’s bet has been painted as frightening: In the early phases, US senators gasped that its allegiances” evidently stay with a foreign state”, then another objections followed.

Donald Trump has said he will quickly halt the deal if he wins, while Kamala Harris has said US Steel may be” American owned and American operated.”

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, which examines foreign buyers for threats to national security, came to the conclusion that Nippon Steel did certainly cause these risks. Neither the state department nor Pentagon shared that watch, but election elections, as some experience Nippon may have foreseen, following a howling logic.

Significant lines have been crossed on the US side throughout Nippon’s various efforts to overcome these obstacles, crossings that cavalierly question Japan’s position as America’s closest ally in Asia and among its best in the world.

This questioning of a Japanese company’s- and by association, Japan’s- trustworthiness as an owner of US assets are, at best, awkwardly timed. They are a gift to the nations that the US and its allies view themselves as being resentful of.

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William Crowther: A severed statue divides an Australian city

ABC News/Luke Bowden The vandalised William Crowther statueABC News/Luke Bowden

For weeks, an unexpected statue sat in an oak-lined circle at the heart of Tasmania’s funds: a pair of severed metal feet.

For more than a century, a monument of renowned surgeon-turned-premier William Crowther had hung over the garden in Hobart. However, one May evening, it was severely damaged and had the words “what goes around” written on its rock bottom.

A morgue was reportedly broken into by Crowther, sliced opened an Indian president’s head, and stole his bone, causing a terrible struggle over the remaining body parts.

Tasmania was the center of coloniser attempts to obliterate Tribal people in Australia. Additionally, William Lanne, the soldier on the block, was hailed as the last person to arrive on the island, making his remains a bizarre trophy for white doctors.

Some view Crowther as a badly anti-American man of his day and his image as a significant portion of the government’s history, warts and all.

But for Lanne’s heirs, it represents imperial brutality, the dehumanising misconception that Tasmanian Aboriginal individuals are dead, and the scapegoating of the island’s history.

Tribal activist Nala Mansell says,” You walk around the city everywhere and you’d never realize Aborigines were here.”

The dismembered monument has now evolved into a symbol of a town and a country struggling to cope with its darkest chapters.

The death stay

Some sites capture the problem really like Risdon Cove, which the Palawa Aboriginal people refer to as piyura kitina.

A monument happily commemorates it as the first English colony to exist on what was then known as Van Diemen’s Land, nestled next to a creek.

BBC/Andrew Wilson Nala Mansell at piyura kitinaBBC/Andrew Wilson

For Australian Aboriginal individuals, though, this mountain on the outskirts of Hobart is “ground no for conquest”.

” It’s the first landing and not coincidentally the first massacre]of our people ]”, Nunami Sculthorpe-Green tells the BBC one overcast day.

Startled from their trance, local hen flakes, which piyura kitina is named after, sprinkle over the lush grass as we arrive.

A marsupial hurriedly travels towards limited candy trees. On May 3, 1804, the Mumirimina people, women, and children may have climbed the mountain and sung while they were kangaroo hunters.

They were met with muskets and guns.

The occurrences of that day- and the dying burden- are disputed. What is uncontested is that this marked the start of a determined campaign by English settlers to eradicate the initial Tasmanians, nine countries with up to 15 000 inhabitants.

Tribal citizens were hunted across the island during the war, and the victims were taken captive and transported to what have been referred to as death camps.

” If that happened anywhere in the world today, it would be referred to as cultural cleansing”, says Greg Lehman, a Palawa professor of history.

This article contains pictures of someone who has passed, so be warned to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.

Lanne, who was kidnapped as a child, spent her last years living in his native land and serving as a favorite argue for his people.

Letters reveal that strong Hobartians had begun plotting even before he passed away from illness in 1869 at the age of 34.

There is no way that that young gentleman would be permitted to stay in a tomb. No way”, writer Cassandra Pybus tells the BBC.

She claims that the fraud of Aboriginal remains had long been tolerated, but in Tasmania, the number of unique citizens had slowed.

Lanne’s skull was used to refute long-since discredited theories about Tasmanian Aboriginal people, claiming that they were the only connection between people and Neanderthals, a distinct race so primitive that they did n’t even know how to make fire.

Before he was buried, his hands and feet would also be cut off and pocketed by surgeons. According to some researchers, his tomb was also robbed, and every bone in his body was removed.

Crowther never denied having part in the theft of Lanne’s bones; his supporters called the allegations a monster chase, but the city was horrified, and he was suspended from his honourable place at the doctor.

What transpired was particularly upsetting for First Countries people, who feared their spirits would just rest when they returned to their property.

But within two weeks, Crowther was elected to state legislature, and he’d quickly rise to become Tasmania’s top for an ordinary six months.

By comparison, Lanne’s bones appears to have wound up on the other side of the world at a UK college, and his people were quickly declared dead.

National Library of Australia/J. W. Beattie William LanneNational Library of Australia/J. W. Beattie

Except they were no.

While different groups, which some do not recognize as Aboriginal, claim their heritage is the work of a few women who managed to avoid being captured in the 1800s, Palawa people today claim their lineage is the product of a dozen women who survived.

However, for the past 150 years, Australian Aboriginal people say they have been fighting to get obvious, in the background pages and in everyday living.

The myth that they are dead is largely attributable to outdated perceptions of ethnic identity. Others claim that it was also a strategic decision to refuse Aboriginal people in Tasmania the rights and powder out their lifestyle.

The effect has been devastating. Some Palawa people claim to have been targeted for their Native American blood in one incident but denied their identity because of their white lineage the following.

Some people still believe that significant portions of their past have been lost or purposefully ignored.

Nala points out that her Hobart school’s only brief instruction in Australian Aboriginal culture and history was in the form of a short lesson on boomerangs and didgeridoos, despite the fact that neither of her people used either.

There are no sites in the area that honor Indian people, aside from a walking trail named after Lanne’s wife and a head in her own right named after her.

According to Nunami,” The way they tell stories about Indian people… they want you to believe that it’s there very far away from where you are, and that it’s anything that happened a very long time ago.”

Unimpressed, the 30-year-old past student started Black Led Tours to fill the gap.

Black Led Tours Tasmania/Jillian Mundy Nunami Sculthorpe-Green leading a tourBlack Led Tours Tasmania/Jillian Mundy

” I realized that I was going to work in the same manner as Truganini used to lead her canines.” And I discovered that my kids had a drinking zoo at William Lanne’s death bed. Additionally, I learned that the Crowther memorial was right next to my vehicle stop.

” And I thought: does anyone know that this is straight below, where we live and where we work?”

A disputed tradition

When unveiling the image in 1889, the then-premier said Crowther was no” a great man”, but one who spent his time doing fine.

His incident was overlooked, but he was most famous for providing poor people with free health care until late.

That rankles Australian Indian people like Nala:” It’s merely a push in the guts.”

She spearheaded a new effort to remove the commemoration as the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre’s representative.

She says,” Having a memorial of Martin Bryant would be no different from having a memorial of him,” referring to the shooter who massacred 35 people in near Port Arthur in 1996.

However, some people, such as Jeff Briscoe, who lost the situation to stop the figure’s removal, think the sculpture has magnificent heritage value because it is the only state memorial that is “fundamentally funded by the public.”

It was a major monument at the time, and everyone was pleased with it. If a couple people’s views rule the world in 2024?

” It’s not as though he was shooting people; he might have been involved in a body’s amputation, but they all were.”

No imperial monument will be protected in Australia because they are lowering the bar so low.

BBC/Andrew Wilson Jeff Briscoe stands in front of the boxed up Crowther statueBBC/Andrew Wilson

Cassandra Pybus claims there is no denying that Crowther mutilated Lanne, citing letters he wrote. Yet, she had argued, like Mr Briscoe, that taking down the monument had set a dangerous law, because” everybody was prejudiced”.

She desired it to continue so that the website could be used to inform visitors about the treatment of the primary Tasmanians.

The monument’s fate divided also Crowther’s living heirs, with some officially supporting the calls for elimination, and others frightened by them.

The committee voted to reduce the monument in 2022, according to Hobart Lord Mayor Anna Reynolds, as a” devotion to telling the truth about our city’s record and as an act of peace with the Indian community.” This is the first of its kind in Australia.

They did it after a thorough assessment and with the help of the” passive majority”, she adds.

Ultimately, she says, the statue is a sign of how desperate Crowther was to repair his reputation, not his significance to the state: “] He’s ] not that important.”

Some became restless and imposed red tape themselves while the government worked through it.

ABC News/Luke Bowden The fallen Crowther statueABC News/Luke Bowden

For Lanne’s successors, their pleasure at the long-awaited collapse of the statue is tinged with pain. They believe that Lanne has been reduced to his demise.

” He had a whole life… and just as he advocated for our women’s rights, we will advocate for his story to be remembered and him to be respected for who he was,” Nunami says.

Time for’ truth-telling’?

The Crowther monument is hardly unique. There are still numerous other identical monuments or monuments across Australia that joke about massacres, use racist slurs, or honor alleged murderers.

Some, like Greg, believe removing or renaming them could be a natural starting point for the” truth-telling” the land needs, to balance with its First Peoples, the oldest living society on the planet.

” You’d believe that it was just a bunch of happy completely inhabitants and not-so-happy prisoners who jumped off the First Fleet… and bingo, there you’ve got present Australia, “he says.

Australia must have an honest partnership with the past in order for it to have an honest and strong relationship with itself.

But after a proposal for an Indigenous political advisory body was defeated at a referendum last year, any movement towards a national truth-telling inquiry has stalled – though many states are setting up their own.

A” truth-telling” process would be a controversial and unnecessary repeating of the past, views that a group of liberal politicians who also oppose a agreement still hold.

Folks want Aborigines to greet them in front of them and allowed us to our nation today. They request that we dance for them. They want us to tell them our speech. They do n’t mind if we put some of our paintings in the mall,” Nala says.

” But if you talk about … any type of profit for the Indian area, or taking up anything that was stolen from us, it’s a completely different ballgame.”

Nevertheless, she appears to be a part of the tide’s gradual turning.

” The Crowther statue … is the first moment I’ve always thought,’ Wow, white folks- they’re starting to get it’,” Nala says.

Blak Led Tours Tasmania/Jillian Mundy Nunami Sculthorpe-GreenBlak Led Tours Tasmania/Jillian Mundy

When the sculpture met its sudden end, the council was nevertheless deciding what to replace it with.

But some wanted the severed feet to stay in the square- as is- arguing they made a sardonic” interesting “and” serious” statement.

However earlier this week, the council plucked the ankles from their perch, to reunite them with the rest of the effigy, citing heritage law requirements.

However, according to Nunami, even the now-distant plinth greatly illustrates the story of Crowther and Lanne better than the statue ever did.

” We get to say we, as the public, learnt, we grew, and we changed the narrative of this place … Look here, we cut that down.”

Read more of our Australia coverage

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PP’s Parit tries to turn govt policy statement into censure debate

Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra announces government policies in parliament on Sept 12. (Photo: Chanat Katanyu)
Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra makes the announcements of state initiatives in legislature on September 12. ( Photo: Chanat Katanyu )

As ministers demanded public support for the government’s ability to implement its policies, the president’s policy statement came to an end on Saturday with a promise to boost the country’s weak economy and address persistent debt issues.

According to Deputy Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai,” the authorities is asking the public to possess confidence in its ability to apply these laws that have been declared in parliament.”

He addressed the coalition state in a final statement released at the conclusion of the two-day legislative session, which ended at 1:00 a.m. on Saturday. The meeting’s entire time was two hours more than the meeting’s original 29 hours.

According to Mr. Phumtham, the policies announced are intended to improve people’s quality of life and build on the job of the previous government over the past month, including tackling family debts, lowering living costs, preventing crimes, and enhancing the government’s ability to compete on the international level through several projects, including workers skill development and supporting the green and electric economies.

During the debate on Friday, the opposition People’s Party ( PP ) turned the policy declaration into a censure debate when Parit Wacharasindhu, a PP list-MP, told those present that this represented a forum to assess the government’s work in the past year.

Even though a new government was established, he claimed, it is still run by essentially the same social events and individuals.

He claimed that no progress had been made by the Srettha Thavisin management, and none of the five policies he promised to put immediately into action had been regarded as successful.

For instance, the digital handout program has n’t yet been implemented while no new measures have been put in place by the Srettha government to lower household debt, according to Mr. Parit.

He said measures aimed at bringing down electricity costs were only temporary, while the president’s bid to improve the country’s tourism industry had yet to offer as much monetary value as expected.

Mr Parit said he could n’t have any confidence in the new government to achieve any of its policies, albeit nicely worded, over the next three years.

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‘Fierce’ rivalry expected in Phitsanulok by-election

As Pheu Thai faces a concern, the People’s Party defends the seats it defeated last year by its incumbent.

People’s Party candidate Nathachanon Chanaburanasak takes a selfie photo with a supporter on Saturday while campaigning ahead of Sunday’s by-election in Constituency 1 of Phitsanulok province. He is hoping to keep the seat, won by the Move Forward Party last year, in “orange” hands. (Photo: Chinnawat Singha)
In preparation for Sunday’s by-election in Constituency 1 of Phitsanulok state, People’s Party member Nathachanon Chanaburanasak poses for a picture with a follower. He is hoping to keep the desk, won by the Move Forward Party next month, in “orange” hands. ( Photo: Chinnawat Singha )

Padipat Santipada, who was banned from politics for ten times following the dissolution of the now-defunct Move Forward Party, will face fierce opposition in Sunday’s by-election in Phitsanulok.

In August, the Constitutional Court disbanded Move Forward and forbade 11 professional members for ten years on the grounds that the party’s plans to update the lese-majeste law threatened the constitutional monarchy.

Even though Mr. Padipat had planned to become “expelled” from the group in order to take up a deputy author’s position in the House, he had been a part of the Move Forward Party committee and was thus subject to the restrictions.

In the May 2023 vote contested by 15 individuals, Mr Padipat received 40, 842 seats, followed by Adunwit Wiwatthanat of Palang Pracharath with 19, 096 and Natthasat Champhunot of Pheu Thai with 18, 180.

Today’s voting is purely a two-candidate battle between Nathachanon Chanaburanasak of the People’s Party, the leader to Move Forward, and Chadet Chanthara of the Pheu Thai Party.

Chadet Chanthara of the Pheu Thai Party, and his party members campaign for votes in Phitsanulok province on Saturday. (Photo: Chinnawat Singha)

On Saturday, Chadet Chanthara of the Pheu Thai Party joins campaigners in Phitsanulok. ( Photo: Chinnawat Singha )

The competition is anticipated to be fierce as both the ruling group and the main opposition parties vie for the seat.

Election Commission (EC ) chairman Ittiporn Boonpracong reported that as of Saturday, no complaints had been received.

That was a good indication that the election had run easily, he said.

Given the number of available citizens at each stop, which ranges between 100 and 200, the vote count is expected to take a maximum of one and a half hours, with voting taking place from 8am to 5pm, according to he.

According to Mr. Ittiporn, the illegal results are anticipated between 8 and 9 p.m.

Constituency 1 has 138, 705 eligible citizens and recorded an amazing 75.2 % attendance next year, so today’s voter participation is also expected to be substantial, he added.

Padipat Santipada, who won he 2023 election in Phitsanulok before facing a political ban, joins a campaign team of the Poeple's Party on Saturday. (Photo: Chinnawat Singha)

Padipat Santipada, who won the 2023 vote in Phitsanulok Constituency 1 by roughly 21, 000 vote before facing a 10-year social restrictions, joins a People’s Party battle group on Saturday. ( Photo: Chinnawat Singha )

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