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		Charges of cheating amid confusion over 
		Thailand's election result 
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		 [March 25, 2019] 
		By Patpicha Tanakasempipat and Panarat Thepgumpanat 
 BANGKOK (Reuters) - Two major political 
		parties raised doubts on Monday about the accuracy of Thailand's 
		election results after a party linked to the military took a surprise 
		lead in the popular vote count that suggested the country's junta chief 
		could remain in power.
 
 One party said it was considering a legal challenge over what it said 
		were poll irregularities and, amid popular dismay over the partial 
		results, the number of signatures on an online petition to impeach the 
		Election Commission leapt by more than 300,000 over a few hours to more 
		than half a million.
 
 "There are irregularities in this election that we're not comfortable 
		with. These affect the nation's credibility and people's trust," said 
		Sudarat Keyuraphan, candidate for prime minister of the Pheu Thai Party.
 
 "We've voiced our concerns before for vote-buying, abuse of power, and 
		cheating. All three have manifested. We will fight back through legal 
		means," she told a news conference.
 
		
		 
		
 She said her party, which is linked to the military's nemesis, 
		self-exiled former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, would join forces with 
		other anti-junta parties to form a government.
 
 It was far from certain that the military's proxy party would secure 
		enough seats in the 500-seat lower house of parliament for Prayuth Chan-ocha 
		to stay on as prime minister.
 
 Unofficial results of the Southeast Asian nation's first election since 
		a 2014 coup had been expected at 2 p.m. (0700 GMT) on Monday. However, 
		the Election Commission said it would announce only the winners of 350 
		seats at 4 p.m. (0900 GMT) and a breakdown of votes for those seats 
		would come on Friday.
 
 "We have nothing to hide," the commission's deputy secretary-general, 
		Nat Laosisawakul, told a news conference.
 
 "CHEATING" TRENDS ON TWITTER
 
 With around 94 percent of overall votes counted it appeared that Pheu 
		Thai had fallen far short of expectations, a surprise for many given 
		that Thaksin-allied parties have won every election since 2001. However, 
		it still looked likely to have the largest share of parliamentary seats.
 
 The strong showing by the pro-junta Palang Pracharat Party stunned 
		voters who had hoped the poll would loosen the grip that traditional 
		elites and the military hold on power in a country that has one of the 
		highest measures of inequality in the world.
 
		
		 
		
 Amid mounting confusion over the results of the poll, Palang Pracharat's 
		spokesman told reporters his party was aiming to muster 251 of the lower 
		house's seats to form a government.
 
 Many Thais took to social media to voice their suspicions about the 
		results of an election that critics had said was systematically skewed 
		in favor of the military from the outset.
 
 Thai-language hashtags that translated as "Election Commission screw-up" 
		and "cheating the election" were trending on Twitter in Thailand.
 
		Many tweets referred to inconsistencies between the numbers for voter 
		turnout and ballots cast in some parliamentary constituencies. Some 
		questioned the overall turnout of less than 70 percent, which was much 
		lower than expected.
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			Sudarat Keyuraphan, Pheu Thai Party's prime minister candidate, 
			speaks during a news conference at Pheu Thai Party headquarters in 
			Bangkok, Thailand, March 25, 2019. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha 
            
 
            Future Forward, a new party that appears to have made a spectacular 
			election debut thanks to its appeal to young voters, also questioned 
			the poll numbers.
 "There are obviously some irregularities with the numbers because 
			they don't add up. This is making people skeptical of the election 
			results," said party spokeswoman Pannika Wanich.
 
 "The Election Commission should address this issue because if the 
			people feel they cannot trust the results, there will be more 
			problems to come," she said.
 
 A change.org petition launched a week ago to impeach the Election 
			Commission had garnered over 511,000 signatures by midafternoon on 
			Monday, up from around 200,000 at the start of the day.
 
 DECK STACKED FOR MILITARY
 
 With all but 6 percent of votes counted, the commission reported 
			that the pro-junta Palang Pracharat was leading with 7.69 million 
			votes. Pheu Thai trailed with 7.23 million votes.
 
 The popular vote numbers did not reflect parliamentary constituency 
			seats won. Pheu Thai could still take the lion's share of these, 
			which are decided on a first-past-the-post basis, because of its 
			popularity in the north and northeast of the country.
 
 Based on a Reuters tally of partial results of the 350 constituency 
			seats contested on Sunday, Pheu Thai was on track to win at least 
			129 and Palang Pracharat at least 102.
 
            
			 
            
 Another 150 "party list" seats in the lower house will be allocated 
			under a complex proportional representation formula.
 
 However, Prayuth looked in a good position to remain in office 
			thanks to a new, junta-devised electoral system.
 
 The lower house and the upper house Senate, whose 250 members are 
			appointed by the junta, will together select the next prime 
			minister.
 
 That means Prayuth's party and allies have to win only 126 seats in 
			the lower house, while Pheu Thai and its potential "democratic 
			front" partners would need 376.
 
 Thailand has been racked for the past 15 years by street protests by 
			both opponents and supporters of Thaksin. The populist former 
			telecoms billionaire was thrown out by the army in 2006 and a 
			government led by his sister was ousted in 2014.
 
 (Additional reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng, Panu Wongcha-um, Kay 
			Johnson and Aye Min Thant; Writing by John Chalmers; Editing by 
			Simon Cameron-Moore)
 
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