Will there be more panic in Thai politics or will it return to balance?
14 million Move Forward citizens and 11 million Pheu Thai voters have been sent a disturbing message by the controversial criminal interventions and impenetrable in-the-middle-room discussions of the past few weeks: that their votes are irrelevant when some powers may be held responsible by the vote.  ,
As one supporter at Move Forward’s headquarters yelled, after the party’s dissolution:” Why the (censored ) are we still voting then”? !
And the less politically engaged member will still be concerned about these developments as they wait for a government to reinvigorate the country’s weak market and fulfill the election promises they made.
At the other end is the 75-year-old Thaksin, who, despite holding no formal political company or group place, could visit all alliance party leaders to his house to discuss the next head of Thailand. That speaks volumes about his enduring control.
He has now paid a high price for his political interests that spanned more than 20 years, and he appears to be paying even more for his return to the country.
Second, the preceding partnership “frenemies,” who are tolerating the current design as long as electricity is being shared, are then engaged in a political battle on two fronts. However, with the ultra-pragmatic Bhumjaithai Party respiration down Pheu Thai’s chest, that peace might be over by the upcoming election campaign.
Then there’s the criticism Women’s Party. Its speed has not lost as a result of its predecessor’s collapse, and it may be able to win the following election as well. Its followers are fresh and believe in its main progressive-reformist philosophy, rather than a cult of personality. They see Mr. Thaksin’s Pheu Thai Party as a part of the social elite, which is why they are too young to have seen him as leader, and they are even very young to have aided in forming a government.
No one has had as much of an impact on Thailand and its politicians as Mr. Thaksin. He sparked the political slam drenching of the remote public as much as he sparked outrage for what critics characterized as a rule with an emperor-like pride.  ,
His persistence can be demonstrated by the fact that he is still the subject of heated conversations. However, one of Mr. Thaksin’s biggest political feints may be placing his daughter in the prime minister’s chair.
If fruitless, it could not merely upend his sister’s rule, but also his own social legacy– and impose lasting damage on Thailand’s damaged democracy.