By Joshua Kurlantzick
Regime leader Prayuth Chan-ocha is coy when pressed about a date for elections.
On his way to meetings in Europe this week, Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who still seems to believe all reporters will simply accept his word without question as if they were in the military, stopped to briefly lecture journalists. Reporters have been asking Prayuth about the junta government’s roadmap for a return to electoral democracy, a question that, like all inquiries, seems exasperating to Prayuth. In the course of his lecture, Prayuth basically let slip that, though he had earlier promised that elections would be held by October 2015, that date might have been overambitious, and Thailand actually might not have elections before 2016. Prayuth left open the possibility that even 2016 might be too soon for elections, or that elections might not happen at all.
As Reuters reported:
“I outlined a road map. The election must come with a new constitution and eleven reform areas,” said Prayuth [to reporters]. “Everything depends on the road map so we must see first if the road map can be completed. Elections take time to organize,” he added, giving no further details.
Prayuth’s fudging on elections reminded me of a famous New Yorker cartoon about a businessman trying to avoid a meeting. (The cartoon was also the title of New Yorker cartoon editor Bob Mankoff’s recent memoir.)
Read the full story at The Diplomat