According to lawful experts, the focus should be on creating an assembly to redraft the law, so that there is no need to hold a referendum on the mandate. Section by section should also be amended.
Previous deputy prime minister and well-known legitimate professional Wissanu Krea-ngam said the referendum could create overwhelming legal and technical challenges for the passage of a comprehensive constitutional amendment to the House of Representatives.
He criticized the bill’s attempt to lay the groundwork for a vote as being more troublesome than necessary.
Before significant changes can be made to the contract, at least three elections, as mandated by the Constitutional Court, may be conducted with an endorsement vote.
Worry is growing that the process of organizing the polls that require broad contract amendments and rewriting the constitution may be completed in time given that the House’s term is scheduled to expire in less than three decades.
According to Mr. Wissanu, the best course of action would be to update the mandate section by section, which is not subject to a vote. But, it specifies which areas or chapters of the contract require a vote if they were to be modified.
” If we go down the path of a vote, we are bound to run into a conversation about how many had conducted.
Be certain, rewrite the sections that are essential or required, and stay away from the sections that require a referendum. If this is done, the mandate article may become finished in time, “he said.
The windows was closing on arranging two polls and amending the contract within the existing House, according to Nikorn Chamnong, a record MP of the Chartthaipattana Party and director of the House-Senate vote council.
He believed that some lawmakers would support the Constitutional Court decision because two referendums would violate it.
He said a viable alternative was for a bill to be tabled to amend Section 256, paving the way for a constitution-rewriting council to be set up to accommodate section-by-section adjustments. He claimed that the costs may be introduced by January and become law by March 2027.