Chief MP says Thaksin does n’t dictate party decisions
The Pheu Thai Party‘s leader says a director’s ask for dissolution from the organization for alleged hegemony by former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra is incorrect and incomplete.
Wisuth Chainarun claimed on Monday that he was conscious of a request by someone to the Election Commission to request Pheu Thai’s breakdown by the , Constitutional Court. The plaintiff claimed that the coalition-core group had allowed itself to be led by former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was not a member of the party.
Mr Wisuth, a roster MP, said hegemony meant the gathering accepting and following purchases, such as the choice of its prime ministerial applicant.
It was earlier reported that Thaksin had recommended , Chaikasem Nitisiri , for excellent secretary, but , Pheu Thai MPs finally settled on and , chosen party , head Paetongtarn Shinawatra, Mr Wisuth said.
Ms Paetongtarn, who was eventually elected prime minister by the House of Representatives, is Thaksin’s youngest baby. She turned 38 on Aug 21.
” I do not see former prime minister Thaksin giving the celebration any instructions,” he said. He has not given any instructions when he has sat in on group gatherings. In his conversations, he expresses his own opinions in his power as a competent former prime minister. It’s a unique issue whether the party adheres to what he says, according to Mr. Wisuth.
When Ms. Paetongtarn arrived in Bangkok on Monday night and arrived at Shinawatra Tower 3, which serves as the party’s slack answer queries, she did not respond.
On August 19, a person who requested anonymity reported filing a request for the group’s disintegration with the Election Commission, accusing Pheu Thai of letting an outsider rule it.
The objection made reference to the Organic Act on Political Parties, which prohibits a person from influencing, dominating, or instructing party activities in ways that render the party or its members centered, directly or indirectly.