Thailand holds an election on May 14 and parties have until
Friday to name their prime ministerial candidates, one of which
will be picked by August in a joint vote of the newly elected
parliament and the appointed senate.
The election commission said incumbent Prayuth Chan-ocha and his
deputy, Prawit Wongsuwan - both former army chiefs from the same
military clique - were nominated by their respective parties, as
was Anutin Charnvirakul, the health minister who spearheaded
Thailand's controversial legalisation of cannabis, and Commerce
Minister Jurin Laksanawisit.
The election broadly pits political groups backed by the
royalist military and Bangkok establishment against an
opposition led by the populist Pheu Thai party, which together
with its previous incarnations has won every election since
2001.
Pheu Thai, controlled by the billionaire Shinawatra family and
its business allies, has nominated as prime ministerial
candidate political neophyte Paetongtarn Shinawatra, 36, hoping
to reignite the electoral base that swept father Thaksin and
aunt Yingluck to power before they were toppled by the army.
The party on Thursday nominated two other candidates for PM -
party stalwart Chaikasem Nitisiri, and popular real estate
magnate Sretta Thavisin, who resigned on Tuesday as chief
executive of developer Sansiri Pcl.
"We'll definitely have a landslide (victory)," Paetongtarn said
while walking into a party forum.
Pita Limjaroenrat, another opposition figure, was nominated by
his Move Forward party, popular among young voters.
Prayuth, 69, has been premier since his 2014 coup against a Pheu
Thai government and is the pick for the new United Thai Nation
party, even though the constitution allows him to serve just two
more years as premier.
His mentor and former junta member Prawit, 77, is running for
the ruling Palang Pracharat party and has presented himself as a
peacemaker who can straddle the warring camps of Thailand's 18
years of on-off turmoil.
Political experts say the generals would have an advantage in
the race, having led the junta that appointed the current slate
of senators.
(Reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng and Panarat Thepgumpanat;
Editing by Martin Petty)
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