New Politics Party

New Politics Party
Leader Somsak Kosaisuuk
Spokesperson Samran Rodpetch
Founded June 2, 2009
Colors Yellow and Green
Website
http://www.npp.or.th/
Somsak Kosaisuuk party leader

The New Politics Party or NPP (Thai: พรรคการเมืองใหม่ ก.ม.ม. or Karn Muang Mai, KMM) is a political party in Thailand which was founded on June 2, 2009. It is the political party of the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), with which it shares the same principles and ideas. It claims that other political parties in Thailand only protect their own vested interests, such as the bureaucrats and nobles, and are unable to tackle the country's problems. The party is expected to solicit more than 5,000 members and set up branches in all the four regions of Thailand, within the one-year deadline. It also plans to an early completion of the registration process in order to contest the next general election.

The party's colors are yellow and green. Yellow refers to the constitutional monarchy of Thailand, and green represents "clean politics", in which corruption is repressed by an independent judiciary.

Aims for Political Reform

PAD and NPP want to replace the National Assembly of Thailand by a body with only 30 per cent directly elected Members of Parliament, the rest installed by employers' and labour unions or similar pressure groups, in order to achieve their ideal of “clean politics”.[1] Their adherents typically distrust established politicians and representatives and want to replace them.[2] The party claims to defend the supposedly endangered monarchy.

History

In May 2009, The People's Alliance for Democracy made an announcement that they were creating a political party. The party was formally registered on June 2, 2009. The interim leader of the party was Somsak Kosaisuuk. On October 7, 2009, Sondhi Limthongkul was elected as the leader of the party.[3]

Key persons

Sondhi Limthongkul, one of the five PAD core leaders and media mogul, is the party's inaugural leader and PAD coordinator. Suriyasai Katasila is the secretary-general. This was decided upon by the 21 co-founders during a meeting that lasted two hours.

2011 rupture

In 2011 it came to a break between Sondhi and the majority of PAD on the one and the NPP leadership around Somsak on the other side. In late March Sondhi demanded the party to boycott the upcoming parliamentary elections according to PAD's extra-parliamentary opposition strategy and its abstention campaign. This was declined by Somsak and his NPP functionaries who are keen on fielding candidates and seeking parliamentary representation. The hardline PAD position however is, that all party politicians - even the ones of NPP - should retreat for a certain period and the King is to appoint a non-partisan expert government. This idea again, was rejected by Somsak and his public servants' union SELRC as undemocratic and “close to a coup d'etat”.[4] This lead consequently to the retirement of Somsak from the PAD leadership in late April and Sondhis leave from the NPP in return. Correctly concluded, the NPP cannot be considered as PAD's political wing any longer.

References

  1. Richard Lloyd Parry. “People's Alliance for Democracy's narrow nationalism in Thailand”, “The Times” online, September 5, 2008, retrieved on January 5, 2011.
  2. Mithran Somasundrum. “Shuffling towards fascism”, Guardian September 3, 2008, retrieved on January 5, 2011
  3. The Nation, Sondhi elected as new leader, October 7, 2009
  4. Bangkok Post, Somsak Vetoes PAD Demand, April 29, 2011
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