Thailand’s opposition party files no-confidence motion against ‘flawed’ PM, elections just months away
- Opposition hopes to bring down Prayuth’s 17-party government, but his majority of 253 parliamentary seats verses 208 means he is likely to prevail, say analysts
- Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and 10 cabinet ministers are accused of corruption, economic mismanagement and of undermining democracy and clinging to power

Thailand’s opposition parties on Wednesday filed a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and 10 cabinet ministers, accusing them of corruption, economic mismanagement and of undermining democracy and clinging to power.
The opposition expects the censure debate to take place next month and hopes it will bring down Prayuth’s 17-party government. It would be the last confidence vote Prayuth, 68, will face before his term ends in March next year.
The retired general, who first came to power in a 2014 coup, has weathered three previous confidence motions since a 2019 election that kept him in power.
“[He] is a leader that has a flawed thinking, likes to cling to power, does not respect the rule of law, lacks morals and failed in managing states affairs,” Chonlanan Srikaew, the leader of the opposition bloc, told the house.
Analysts say the government’s parliamentary majority of 253 seats verses the opposition’s 208 makes it likely Prayuth will prevail.
Stithorn Thananithichot, director of the Office of Innovation for Democracy at King Prajadhipok’s Institute, said Prayuth should survive as his coalition was still unified, while political analyst Sukhum Nualsakul said the motion was aimed more at next year’s election than Prayuth’s removal.