Thailand’s Constitutional Court accepted a petition by a group of senators seeking to remove Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin on ethical grounds but allowed the premier to perform his duties until it ruled on the case.
The court will scrutinize the plea by 40 senators that Srettha’s decision to appoint Pichit Chuenban as a cabinet minister last month had constituted a serious violation of ethical standards under the constitution, the court said in a statement on Thursday.
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The court voted six to three to accept the petition for consideration whether Srettha should be removed from duties, while voting five to four against suspending his duties in the meantime. It gave Srettha 15 days to submit his defense from when he is formally notified of the court decision.
A former lawyer for the influential Shinawatra family, Pichit was appointed as a minister attached to the prime minister’s office in a reshuffle last month but lacked the qualifications required to take up such a post, according to the group of senators. He resigned as minister on Tuesday, saying he wanted to save Srettha from any legal troubles. The resignation acquitted him of further scrutiny in the case, the court said.
Pichit was sentenced to six months in jail in 2008 for contempt of court after he attempted to bribe Supreme Court officials while representing former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra during a corruption trial.
The move poses a fresh challenge for Srettha’s coalition government that was cobbled together with a group of pro-royalist parties after the military-appointed Senate thwarted the winner of last year’s general election from taking power. The premier, a Thaksin loyalist, has struggled to pull Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy from a decade of sub 2% annual growth rate, well behind its regional peers.
Srettha, who is in Japan to attend a conference and expected to return on Friday, said earlier this week that he believed his appointment of Pichit had no compliance issue but that he respected any move to scrutinize him.
In 2022, Srettha’s predecessor, then-premier Prayuth Chan-Ocha was suspended from duties by the same court as it deliberated whether he had breached a term limit under the charter. It eventually ruled in his favor about a month afterward and allowed him to resume his duties.
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