FPIF 60-Second Expert |
Talking Points for the Time-Crunched
The Thai Coup
Walden Bello | September 29, 2006
Editor: John Feffer, IRC
|


|
|
|
Even before the military ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on September 19, Thai democracy was in severe crisis. The country had suffered a succession of elected but do-nothing or exceedingly corrupt regimes. The International Monetary Fund (IMF), which for all intents and purposes ran the country with no accountability from 1997 to 2001, further eroded the legitimacy of Thai democracy by imposing a program that brought great hardship to the majority. Thaksin stoked this disaffection with the IMF and the political system to create a majority coalition that allowed him to violate constitutional constraints, infringe on democratic freedoms, and using the state as a mechanism of private capital accumulation.
A politically diverse opposition with a middle-class base sought to oust Thaksin by relying not on electoral democracy but on the democracy of the street. The democracy movement was about to launch the final phase to drive Thaksin out when the military intervened.
Though it is now popular among Bangkokians, the coup may have temporarily ended the crisis but at the pain of provoking a much deeper one.
- Thaksin's mass base of the poor and underprivileged will view post-coup regimes as possessing little democratic legitimacy.
- The military has reasserted its traditional, self-defined role as the "arbiter" of Thai politics, a function that had been defined as illegitimate for the last 14 years.
- The military deliberately abolished the one authentic popularly drawn-up constitution, the 1997 Constitution, which placed many controls on the exercise of parliamentary and executive power and on the behavior of politicians and bureaucrats.
For the full article, go to A Siamese Tragedy.
|
 Please donate your economic stimulus rebate to a progressive future.
|
|
|
Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies.
Recommended citation:
Walden Bello, "The Thai Coup" 60-Second Expert (Silver City, NM and Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, September 29, 2006).
Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/3558
Production Information:
Author(s): Walden Bello
Editor(s): John Feffer, IRC
Production: Erik Leaver, IPS |
|
Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment.
Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not
corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are
rejected. |
| |
| Name: |
May |
Date: Oct 04, 2006 |
| Mr. Bello is correct, there is "a deep crisis of legitimacy among elite democracies". The operative word here is "elite". He himself resides in a country where that is also true as so poignantly described in a series of articles in Asia Times online on the Philippines. The crisis is caused by who comes to power; and how they use their power. Pakistan's Democrats like those of the Philippines are feudals, who treat the voters as if they are their tenant farmers. They only behave as if they believe in democracy when they are out of power. In power that is a different story.
Thaksin played a most cynical game that the poor of Thailand failed to see. Did they benefit the way he enriched himself? However, even in the West there is now a crisis of democracy occuring in many countries. The list includes the US, UK, Denmark, all countries that were supposed to have solid democracies; yet the leaders in power behave like autocrats with dwindling local support. Democracy is in crisis; and what is needed is better quality of representation and respect for the institutions needed to protect and sustain democracy. |
|
| Discussion for this article has been closed. |
| |
Contact FPIF's webmaster with inquiries regarding the functionality of this website.
Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies.
|
|
|
|