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Thailand’s Grand Reconciliation: The Shinawatras and the Establishment
Associated Press, Wason Wanichakorn
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Thailand’s Grand Reconciliation: The Shinawatras and the Establishment

The rift between Thaksin and the establishment finally appears to have been resolved. This compromise not only fails to address any of Thailand’s past mistakes, but it actually repeats them. 

By James Buchanan

This month marks the 10th anniversary of the 2014 military coup in Thailand, which led to five years of outright military rule by a junta fronted by General Prayut Chan-o-cha, plus a further four years in which he presided over a flawed parliamentary system dominated by the same royalist and pro-military establishment that initiated the coup.

A decade on, the political landscape looks very different, with Prayut retired from politics after a dismal campaign in the 2023 election, and the Pheu Thai Party, the victims of the 2014 putsch, now leading a coalition government. King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the powerful monarch who signed off on the coup, passed away in 2016, and his son, King Vajiralongkorn, sits on the throne.

However, the 2014 coup and its legacy continues to shape Thailand’s politics in significant ways.

The lead up to the coup began in late 2013, with then-Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra facing mass demonstrations that threatened to bring down her government. The demonstrators accused her of being a puppet installed by her brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, whom they claimed was pulling the strings from abroad. Thaksin himself had been ousted by a previous military coup in 2006, and subsequently fled the country to avoid criminal charges he has said were politically motivated.

In their mission to free Thailand from what they called “Thaksin-ism,” the protestors insisted that Yingluck be expelled from the country. During a press conference to address the protests, she became visibly upset when asked about this aspect of the protestors’ demands.

“We are all Thais – do you want me to not even set foot on Thai soil again?” she said in a trembling voice, tears welling in her eyes. “I have retreated until I don’t know how to retreat any further,” Yingluck added, before turning sharply and walking away from the podium.

In May 2014, with the anti-government protests still ongoing, Yingluck was removed from office by the courts in a kind of judicial coup. To finish the job, what remained of her embattled government was toppled by the military just a couple of weeks later. It was Thailand’s second military coup in less than a decade, and the second against a member of the Shinawatra family.

The junta detained Yingluck at an undisclosed location for two days, and then began legal proceedings against her. The protestors eventually got their wish when Yingluck fled Thailand to join her brother, Thaksin, in exile. The courts would later find her guilty of not properly performing her duties as prime minister, and sentence her in absentia to five years in prison. To avoid the sentence, she has not set foot on Thai soil to this day.

“Thaksin Versus the King”

What was it that made the Shinawatra family disliked to the extent that they should not only be driven out of power, but out of the country as well? Whatever it was, it certainly wasn’t a sentiment shared by all Thais. On the contrary, both Thaksin and Yingluck had won sizable majorities in elections, drawing particular support from the north and northeast of Thailand: populous, lower-income regions that had benefited most from some of Thaksin’s policies, such as debt relief, micro-loans, and the 30 baht universal healthcare scheme.

By contrast – and highlighting the regional and class elements of Thailand’s political divide – the anti-Shinawatra movement drew its support mostly from the Bangkok middle classes, and from the relatively prosperous Upper South. However, it was upper class elite Thais, including titled aristocrats boasting lineage to past kings, who played an important role in kickstarting the mobilizations against the Shinawatras. So much so that the Bangkok Post made special mention of the "Blue Blood Jet Set” element when reporting on the early rallies against Thaksin. This provides insight into what made the movement against the Shinawatras so emotionally charged during his time in office: Namely, that Thaksin somehow fell afoul of the country’s royalist establishment.

Other explanations for the depth of hatred toward Thaksin and his family don’t stand up to scrutiny. Western observers have rightly condemned his role in Thailand’s War on Drugs, which led to thousands of arbitrary killings. However, the Thais protesting against him seemed largely untroubled by this, and probably even supported it. Likewise, anti-Thaksin protestors were mostly silent on other human rights abuses that occurred under his watch, such as those impacting the Malay Muslim population in the country’s troubled southernmost provinces.

A more common accusation against Thaksin was that he was corrupt, a central rallying cry at the protests against him and his sister. Understandably, this issue is keenly felt in a country where corruption is endemic at almost all levels of society. However, it’s puzzling that the crusade against corruption was focused solely on members of the Shinawatra family. In fact, the movement against Yingluck happily followed the leadership of former Democrat MP Suthep Thaugsuban, whose own corruption was well-known.

What’s more, the levels of political corruption almost certainly increased under the post-coup government led by Prayut, whose Cabinet included a host of disreputable characters. The anti-corruption voices that yelled loudly against the Shinawatras suddenly fell silent when confronted by other well-reported scandals, such as the luxury watches owned by Prawit Wongsuwan, Prayut’s deputy prime minister and close ally.

Fighting corruption was simply a means to get rid of Thaksin rather than an end in itself. What the protests – and coups – against the Shinawatra family were primarily about was that Thaksin had fallen out of favor with the powerful establishment figures centered around the palace. They had begun to see him as a threat.

One likely reason for this was apprehension at Thaksin’s success at the polls, as well as his popularity in rural areas. After all, these were the same parts of the country in which then-monarch King Bhumibol had, according to official palace mythology, trekked and toiled and sweated, as he met with locals while surveying for royally-sponsored development projects. Thaksin’s own policies to benefit the rural poor, and the gratitude he received in return, were seen by the palace and its supporters as an affront to this legacy.

It’s also likely that the palace felt Thaksin had overstepped in his relations with members of the royal family. We know from leaked U.S. diplomatic cables that royalist elites, including Privy Councillor Prem Tinsulanonda, were displeased with Thaksin’s involvement with then-Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn, and the fact that Thaksin is said to have showered the prince with significant amounts of money to win his favor. Moreover, Thaksin is rumored to have had some kind of relationship with King Bhumibol’s eldest daughter, Ubolratana, beginning as far back as the 1970s when the two were living in the United States.

For whatever reason, the palace turned against Thaksin in a visceral way, and from that moment on, his position became untenable. When the fiercely royalist military overthrew him in 2006, the coup was widely believed to have been planned by Prem Tinsulanonda and the king’s Privy Council – perhaps even with the involvement of King Bhumibol himself. As Thai political analyst Thitinan Pongsudhirak said at the time, “This coup was nothing short of Thaksin versus the King.”

But the coup was a huge miscalculation. It plunged Thailand into a messy and protracted crisis from which it is still trying to extricate itself. The elites who initiated the coup were out of touch with how much the country had changed in the 21st century, and taken aback by the continued support for Thaksin. They seemed to expect that, by quietly signaling the palace’s support for the anti-Thaksin protests and the coup, they would win the acquiescence of the population. They found instead that many Thais still passionately believed in democracy, as flawed as it often was in the country.

Moreover, since Thaksin had courted previously overlooked voters in rural areas, and delivered on election promises that provided them with tangible benefits, they realized that their votes held actual value. These people, many of whom would go on to form the basis of the pro-Thaksin Red Shirt movement, were furious that the coup had taken away their electoral power. In 2007, after one year of military rule, the overly confident establishment permitted new elections. They were surprised and appalled when a Thaksin proxy party, the People’s Power Party, emerged victorious. If the 2006 coup was indeed “Thaksin versus the King,” then the election results suggested that Thaksin was winning.

From the perspective of the palace and its supporters, this only intensified the perceived level of threat, which was sharpened further by anxiety over the looming royal succession. At the time of the 2006 coup, King Bhumibol was approaching 79 years and in poor health. Having been monarch since 1946, he was the only king most Thais had ever known and, according to the royalist worldview, he was also the very fabric holding the country together. To make matters worse, his son and heir, Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn, was widely disliked and considered unsuitable for the throne.

Driven by this sense of existential unease, the royalist establishment doubled down on its mission to curb Thaksin’s electoral success, sending the country hurtling from one crisis to another. From 2007 until 2014, Thailand went through numerous rounds of debilitating, often violent, street protests.

In 2008, Bangkok’s two main international airports were closed by anti-Thaksin Yellow Shirt protesters for more than a week, disrupting hundreds of flights and leaving hundreds of thousands of travelers around the world stranded.

In 2009, pro-Thaksin Red Shirt protesters stormed a building hosting a regional summit, forcing Asian leaders to the rooftop to be evacuated by helicopter. In 2010, further pro-Thaksin Red Shirt rallies were brought to a violent end by a brutal military crackdown, with a final death toll of around 86 civilians.

In 2013-2014, the “Shutdown Bangkok” protests against the Yingluck government caused major disruptions in the capital for six months before the military seized power.

The cost of this extended conflict was significant; the economy suffered incalculable losses, Thailand’s international standing was damaged, and the country was left bitterly divided.

All of this was also a disaster for the palace, which faced an unprecedented backlash due to its perceived political interference and bias. The social taboo of publicly criticizing the monarchy – not to mention fear of the lèse-majesté law, which severely punishes anyone deemed to have “insulted” the king – ensured that the rumblings of discontent began quietly. Nonetheless, at early pro-Thaksin rallies and on the internet forums of the day, some Thais were testing the waters by discussing the political role of the monarchy.

In 2007, thousands of Red Shirts marched on the private residence of Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda, blaming him for masterminding the coup. The incident infuriated royalists, who saw it as a veiled attack on the palace itself.

As use of social media became more widespread, criticism of the monarchy became more prevalent, and the establishment found itself reaching for the lèse-majesté law more often in an attempt to contain it. However, the unresolvable dilemma for the royalists was that the more people were imprisoned for insulting the monarchy, the more people grew to resent the institution. On at least one occasion, in 2010, dissatisfaction with the palace spilled out onto the street, with chanting and the spraying of anti-monarchy graffiti in Bangkok’s Ratchaprasong district.

The irony is that Thaksin had never really shown any inclination to undermine the monarchy or upset the social order that was built around it. As prime minister, he had gone to great lengths to ensure that the 60th anniversary of King Bhumibol's accession to the throne was celebrated with as much pomp and grandeur as possible. And even though Thaksin’s attempts to get close to members of the royal family may have seemed lacking in refinement to those already within the palace inner circle, his neediness suggests a kind of idolatry of the monarchy, rather than contempt.

As a nouveau riche, Thaksin desperately wanted to join the established social order that drew its legitimacy and power from its proximity to the monarchy – not tear it down. But the establishment, in its insecurity, imagined a threat that was never really there, and in doing so, created a real one.

Once he was cast out – both figuratively from the Thai elite, and literally from the country – Thaksin at times showed signs of fighting back. He would appear by satellite to speak to his Red Shirt supporters as they occupied Bangkok streets, and in a BBC interview broadcast at the height of the protests in 2010, he even claimed he would return to Thailand if the Red Shirts overthrew the government.

However, at other times, he would seem to pull back, especially when it came to crossing the line with regard to the monarchy. Frustrated by this, many of his supporters coined the term “fighting then bowing” to describe the approach of Thaksin and his party.

When a close adviser once urged him to take a more radical approach, Thaksin is said to have lost his temper. “Since when did I say I was Ho Chi Minh?” he chastised, slamming his fist on the table. Thaksin is a businessman, not a revolutionary – and his instincts have always leaned less toward picking a fight, and more toward striking a deal.

A New Generation of Radicals

Meanwhile, in the oppressive aftermath of the 2014 coup, a new generation of would-be revolutionaries were coming of age. Unlike past coups, in which the military had seized power only briefly, it was clear in 2014 that they were settling in for a longer haul. By the end of Prayut’s five years of military dictatorship in 2019, the crisis had been dragging on for some 14 years.

This meant that many younger Thais had grown up knowing only political turmoil. They were also growing up in one of the world’s few outright military dictatorships, which they found embarrassing. The dictatorship infringed on their lives in numerous ways, from Prayut’s dull “Returning Happiness to the People” TV show, which was broadcast weekly, to his outdated, royalist “12 core values,” which he mandated all school children recite daily.

For young Thais who wondered if all of this was normal, the internet proved an important window to the wider world. Since the 2006 coup, many activists had been growing more vocal in their campaign to abolish the lèse-majesté law. Fearing reprisals when the military seized power again in 2014, they fled the country. From exile, they were able to continue their activism online, and were now more free to speak their mind about all things monarchy-related.

No amount of resources the military government might pour into monitoring and blocking could stem the tide, and it was now becoming relatively normal to find anti-monarchy content on the internet. Curious young Thais were just a few clicks away from information about the monarchy, or the lèse-majesté law, or the brutal crackdown on the Red Shirts, or landmark historical events that weren’t properly taught at school, like the 1932 Revolution, the 1973 popular uprising, and the 1976 massacre of students at Thammasat University. In this context, a new political consciousness was taking root in the country’s youth.

In 2016, King Bhumibol passed away at the age of 88, having reigned for 70 years. The royalist establishment could take some comfort in knowing that the inevitable happened under the watch of a military government, and that the succession would proceed smoothly.

Later that year, Vajiralongkorn ascended the throne. As expected, he lacked the aura of his father, and struggled to endear himself to the nation. It didn’t help that he spent most of his first few years as king in Germany, and that his behavior and lifestyle was often erratic. The new monarch soon became an easy target for critics, and fewer royalists seemed willing to defend him.

After years of Prayut’s dictatorship, and amid growing anticipation of a much-promised election, a new political party suddenly announced its arrival. The Future Forward Party, headed by the young billionaire auto parts magnate, Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, made an immediate impact on Thailand’s political scene. The party’s youthful, cosmopolitan, and progressive image captured the imagination of many Thais, especially in the younger generation.

By Thai standards, Future Forward’s platform was radical; it promised to curtail the power of the military, tackle social inequality, and challenge oligarchy. Even more alarming for the establishment was that, among the party’s founding members was left-leaning legal scholar and vocal lèse-majesté critic, Piyabutr Saengkanokkul.

Although Prayut’s party won the 2019 election, which was widely seen as flawed, the new Future Forward Party did surprisingly well, winning 81 seats and 17 percent of the popular vote. As had been expected, the party did well with younger voters in Bangkok and other urban centers, but it also proved to have national appeal. Some of its most loyal supporters included more progressive Red Shirt activists, who were tired of Thaksin’s “fight, then bow” approach and saw Future Forward as a more likely vehicle for structural reform.

But the party was taking a dangerous leap. If challenging the monarchy wasn’t risky enough, Future Forward was also standing up to the military and oligarchy – arguably the three most powerful structures comprising the Thai establishment. By March 2020, the party had been dissolved by the courts in an obvious example of political bias and interference.

The loss of Future Forward brought its young supporters out onto the streets in demonstrations that grew into the lengthy protests of 2020 and 2021. Beginning as rallies against the court decision and the illegitimacy of the Prayut government, the protests developed to include unprecedented calls for reform of the monarchy. The embers of discontent with the palace, which had appeared in the twilight of King Bhumibol’s reign with the 2006 coup and the Red Shirts, were now ablaze amid the reign of King Vajiralongkorn. The establishment were shocked and appalled at the scale and boldness of the monarchy reform protests, and at first seemed unsure how to handle the situation.

Although the youth protests eventually burned out, succumbing to fatigue, COVID-19 restrictions, and a barrage of legal cases brought against the movement leaders, they had struck terror into the hearts of the Thai establishment. If royalists thought Thaksin and the Red Shirts were bad, Future Forward and the new generation of fearless anti-monarchy activists were their absolute worst nightmare.

This is what gave Thaksin the opening to make the deal he had long hoped for.

Homecomings

Going into the 2023 election, it was clear that Thailand was ready for change. The economy was in a poor state, and even Prayut’s supporters found it hard to muster much enthusiasm for him and his government. The most likely outcome of the election seemed to be a coalition government comprised of Thaksin’s Pheu Thai and Move Forward, the successor to the dissolved Future Forward.

With Move Forward discussing reforming the monarchy, amending the lèse-majesté law, and putting the royal budget under more scrutiny, the royalist establishment had already decided it needed to be kept out of power at all costs. To their horror, Move Forward exceeded expectations by coming first in the polls.

Suddenly, Thaksin appeared to the establishment to be the lesser of two evils.

In a series of meetings in the United Kingdom, Dubai, and Hong Kong, Thailand’s elites met Thaksin and his allies to entice Pheu Thai to abandon its coalition with Move Forward and instead share power with the royalist, pro-military establishment parties. To lead the new government, real estate developer Srettha Thavisin was selected. A political novice, Srettha was chosen due to his close relationship with the Shinawatras, particularly Yingluck. As part of the complex set of negotiations, both Thaksin and Yingluck would be permitted to return home to Thailand unhindered.

In August 2023, on the same day that Srettha won the backing of parliament to become Thailand’s next prime minister, Thaksin finally returned to the country after 15 years in exile. Arriving at Bangkok’s Don Muang airport, he bowed before a portrait of King Vajiralongkorn, who would soon reduce his eight-year prison sentence to just one year. Ultimately, Thaksin spent just six months in a special suite at the Police General Hospital, where he was transferred citing health issues. He was then released on early parole.

The whole process was a masterful piece of theater, which signaled Thaksin’s rehabilitation to the nation. The choreography of events also made it clear that this was happening under the patronage of the king, to whom Thaksin was displaying his loyalty.

Thaksin’s Pheu Thai Party is now back in government, as it was before the 2014 coup. However, it shares power in an 11-party coalition, with six of those parties holding Cabinet positions. This may seem unwieldy, but at the peak of its power, Pheu Thai was always a party comprised of different factions stitched together under Thaksin’s banner. In fact, some of the key individuals representing the other parties in the current cabinet are formerly of Pheu Thai, such as current Minister of Agriculture Thamanat Prompao.

Thaksin’s party will no longer be the electoral juggernaut it once was, but the current constitution is designed to make forming a majority government near impossible in any case. As long as that remains true, Pheu Thai may be content being the largest party in such coalition governments.

With everyone’s interests so intertwined, and everyone sharing the benefits, it’s an arrangement that just might work – in the short term at least. The military continues to watch closely from the sidelines, the unelected Senate remains a powerful establishment check on parliament, and, crucially, King Vajiralongkorn has obviously given the arrangement his seal of approval. Since ascending the throne, the king is rumored to have favored a sort of national-unity government as a way out of the crisis, which the current situation resembles.

After almost 20 years of conflict, the rift between Thaksin and the establishment finally appears to have been resolved. With the passing of time, many of the individuals who might have previously made the reconciliation difficult are no longer with us. King Bhumibol has passed away, as has Prem Tinsulanonda. Queen Sirikit, whose role was significant, is 91 years old and has been hospitalized for many years after a severe stroke in 2012. Those royalists who may still harbor some ill-feeling against Thaksin are unable to move against him because King Vajiralongkorn has facilitated his rehabilitation.

The king’s generosity toward Thaksin is not due to their past relationship, nor the money he received while crown prince. When King Vajiralongkorn first ascended the throne, he showed no initial interest in assisting Thaksin’s return to Thailand. But now, Thaksin offers a solution to a political problem. The king needs Thaksin to keep Move Forward out of power, and Thaksin needs the king to remain in Thailand without persecution. It’s quite likely that this mutual dependence will endure.

However, this compromise not only fails to address any of Thailand’s past mistakes, but it actually repeats them. The deal between Thaksin and the elites has ridden roughshod over the electoral rights of the millions of Thais who voted for Move Forward. Not only has the party been unfairly blocked from power, but it also faces a likely dissolution by the courts on charges of attempting to overthrow the monarchy.

If this occurs, its party leaders will be banned from politics for 10 years. Once again, the palace will be perceived to be interfering with politics, and the resentment against it will grow. In closing the political space for Move Forward and its supporters, the establishment only raises the chances of yet more street protests.

Thaksin’s daughter recently posted photos of the former prime minister relaxing in the swimming pool of his family home in Bangkok. Smiling for the camera, the 74-year old appeared happy and content as he held two of his young grandchildren in his arms.

During Thai New Year, Yingluck posted a photo of herself celebrating in London, lamenting that another year had passed when she wasn’t in Thailand. But the wheels seem to be in motion: She has already been cleared of two legal cases and is likely to return later this year. Like her brother, she will almost certainly make a show of deference to the king on her arrival.

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The Authors

James Buchanan is an independent analyst of Thai politics. From 2020 to 2022 he was a Visiting Lecturer of International Relations and Global Affairs at Mahidol University.

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