Thai PM Paetongtarn Shinawatra Faces No-Confidence Vote in Parliament

Thai PM Paetongtarn Shinawatra faces a no-confidence vote, testing her coalition's unity amid opposition allegations. [Image via Kathmandu Post]

Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra will on Wednesday be the subject of a no-confidence vote in parliament, in an early test of the unity of her ruling coalition following two days of intense grilling by the opposition.

Paetongtarn, 38, became Thailand’s youngest premier in August and despite lukewarm ratings in opinion polls and fierce criticism during the televised censure debate, she is expected to prevail in the vote, with no open signs of discord in her 11-party alliance.

She faced a host of allegations in parliament this week, from economic mismanagement and tax evasion to favouring her wealthy family and allowing her powerful father Thaksin Shinawatra to interfere in government, though analysts have said the censure is unlikely to weaken her administration.

Her coalition controls 320 of the 500 seats in the lower house and the motion against the premier will need the support of more than half of the lawmakers present to succeed.

Also See: The Pakistan Democracy Act—Misplaced Priorities and Selective Accountability

The opposition People’s Party, the biggest party in parliament, directed much of its attacks on Paetongtarn’s close relationship with her father, a polarising billionaire former premier who is banned from holding office over a conviction for conflicts of interest and abuse of power that kept him in self-exile for 15 years.

Thaksin has loomed large over Thai politics for 24 years and returned home in 2023. He spent six months in detention in hospital under a government led by the Pheu Thai Party he founded, before being released on parole and declaring he was retired from politics.

Paetongtarn, the fourth member of the Shinawatra family to hold the top job, denied allegations levelled against her during the debate and has repeatedly said she only took advice from her father.

“I am doing this with the best of my abilities. I am also Thaksin Shinawatra’s daughter, I say this proudly,” Paetongtarn said in her closing statements on Tuesday.

This news is sourced from Kathmandu Post and is intended for informational purposes only.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

When Insurgents Rule: The Taliban’s Crisis of Governance

When Insurgents Rule: The Taliban’s Crisis of Governance

The Taliban’s confrontation with Pakistan reveals a deeper failure at the heart of their rule: an insurgent movement incapable of governing the state it conquered. Bound by rigid ideology and fractured by internal rivalries, the Taliban have turned their military victory into a political and economic collapse, exposing the limits of ruling through insurgent logic.

Read More »
The Great Unknotting: America’s Tech Break with China, and the Return of the American System

The Great Unknotting: America’s Tech Break with China, and the Return of the American System

As the U.S. unwinds decades of technological interdependence with China, a new industrial and strategic order is emerging. Through selective decoupling, focused on chips, AI, and critical supply chains, Washington aims to restore domestic manufacturing, secure data sovereignty, and revive the Hamiltonian vision of national self-reliance. This is not isolationism but a recalibration of globalization on America’s terms.

Read More »
Inside the Istanbul Talks: How Taliban Factionalism Killed a Peace Deal

Inside the Istanbul Talks: How Taliban Factionalism Killed a Peace Deal

The collapse of the Turkiye-hosted talks to address the TTP threat was not a diplomatic failure but a calculated act of sabotage from within the Taliban regime. Deep factional divides—between Kandahar, Kabul, and Khost blocs—turned mediation into chaos, as Kabul’s power players sought to use the TTP issue as leverage for U.S. re-engagement and financial relief. The episode exposed a regime too fractured and self-interested to act against terrorism or uphold sovereignty.

Read More »
The Indo-Afghan Arc: Rewriting Pakistan’s Strategic Geography

The Indo-Afghan Arc: Rewriting Pakistan’s Strategic Geography

The deepening India-Afghanistan engagement marks a new strategic era in South Asia. Beneath the façade of humanitarian cooperation lies a calculated effort to constrict Pakistan’s strategic space, from intelligence leverage and soft power projection to potential encirclement on both eastern and western fronts. Drawing from the insights of Iqbal and Khushhal Khan Khattak, this analysis argues that Pakistan must reclaim its strategic selfhood, strengthen regional diplomacy, and transform its western border from a vulnerability into a vision of regional connectivity and stability.

Read More »
Pakistan’s rejection of a Taliban proposal to include the TTP in Turkey talks reaffirmed its sovereignty and refusal to legitimize terrorism.

Legitimacy, Agency, and the Illusion of Mediation

The recent talks in Turkey, attended by Afghan representatives, exposed the delicate politics of legitimacy and agency in Pakistan-Afghanistan relations. By rejecting the Taliban’s proposal to include the TTP, Pakistan safeguarded its sovereignty and avoided legitimizing a militant group as a political actor, preserving its authority and strategic narrative.

Read More »