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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
National

Parliament rejects Pita's renomination for PM

A protester holds up a placard during a protest at Democracy Monument on Wednesday evening following the court-ordered suspension of Move Forward Party leader and prime ministerial candidate Pita Limjaroenrat earlier in the day and a subsequent vote to prevent his nomination from being considered a second time. (Photo: AFP)

The joint House and Senate sitting voted on Wednesday to reject the renomination of Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat for prime minister because a parliamentary regulation bans it.

Parliament President Wan Muhamad Noor Matha made the announcement after 715 parliamentarians voted electronically about 5.10pm. The parliament president called the vote after a lengthy debate on the issue, which started shortly after the meeting opened at 9.30am.

In the joint sitting, 394 parliamentarians, most of them unelected senators, voted against Mr Pita's renomination, 312 voted to support it, eight abstained and one did not exercise the right to vote.

Mr Wan said the rejection was by majority vote, because half the votes in the joint sitting was 374. The number was adjusted after Mr Pita was suspended from duty as an MP by the Constitutional Court earlier in the day.

Mr Wan scheduled the next attempt to choose a premier for July 27, when the Pheu Thai Party is expected to propose its candidate. Businessman Srettha Thavisin is the likely choice, but the composition of the coalition might change.

The mere presence of the progressive Move Forward Party in the current eight-party coalition alongside Pheu Thai is still seen as a deal-breaker for many of the senators. If the Pheu Thai candidate does not receive a majority, he or she will not get a second chance.

Mr Pita’s Move Forward Party  won the election, which cost taxpayers 6 billion baht, with 151 House seats. Recently he said he would make way for the Pheu Thai Party to nominate a prime minister if his bid failed.

Pheu Thai won 141 House seats and the two parties are the key members of the current coalition.

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