Coup Coming? With Paetongtarn Shinawatra Removed From Office, Thailand Is in Chaos
from Asia Unbound and Asia Program
from Asia Unbound and Asia Program

Coup Coming? With Paetongtarn Shinawatra Removed From Office, Thailand Is in Chaos

Thailand's Paetongtarn Shinawatra speaks during a press conference following her removal by the Constitutional Court.
Thailand's Paetongtarn Shinawatra speaks during a press conference following her removal by the Constitutional Court. Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters

The sudden ouster of the prime minister leaves few positive leadership options, and could push the armed forces toward intervention.

August 29, 2025 4:52 pm (EST)

Thailand's Paetongtarn Shinawatra speaks during a press conference following her removal by the Constitutional Court.
Thailand's Paetongtarn Shinawatra speaks during a press conference following her removal by the Constitutional Court. Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters
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On Friday, former Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra was removed from office by Thailand’s top court. She was removed supposedly because she committed ethics violations via a leaked phone call to Cambodia’s de facto leader Hun Sen that, the court said, showed she “lacks the qualifications and possesses prohibited characteristics” that disqualify her from being prime minister. On the call, which happened during the Thailand-Cambodia border conflict, she appeared to insult Thai generals and act like she would serve at Hun Sen’s pleasure.

Courts getting rid of Shinawatra prime ministers, though, is not a new situation in Thailand. As Reuters notes, “Paetongtarn, who was Thailand's youngest prime minister, becomes the sixth premier from or backed by the billionaire Shinawatra family to be removed by the military or judiciary in a tumultuous two-decade battle for power between the country's warring elites.”

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This move leaves parliament and the entire country in further chaos, compounded by, as I noted in a prior post, her father Thaksin Shinawatra, the country’s political power broker, being acquitted of lese majeste charges earlier this week. His acquittal added even more to uncertainty in Thailand, because he is clearly a weakened political force and yet remains on the political scene.

Given Paetongtarn’s unpopularity even before the call and the Thai-Cambodia border conflict, and her major mistake of seeming to grovel to Hun Sen on the call, her formal ouster was always fairly likely.  But in her wake, there are few positive options that appear in the near term.

Since parliament, currently led by an interim prime minister, needs to elect a new prime minister, the Shinawatra party Pheu Thai still could scrape together enough votes to have a tiny majority in parliament and choose the prime minister– even though another party, Bhumjaithai, claims it could form a coalition. (Bhumjaithai is too small to form a coalition without Pheu Thai or the other large party, Move Forward, a progressive party anathema to the military and which has nothing in common with Bhumhaithai.)

Still, despite the verdict, a weak Pheu Thai in a weak parliament remains the best option for the powerful military and royal palace. A neutered parliament allows the military to take on even more policy-making power, which they already have been gradually accumulating by sparking nationalism via the border conflict, being more assertive in the public persona, pursuing lese majeste charges against Paul Chambers, an American academic, and other moves.

And with Thaksin still around, having been found guilty, he, as a scapegoat, also can take some of the blame for parliamentary mistakes or inaction. Meanwhile, it is likely that street protests over parliament’s failures and Thailand’s economic problems start to swell significantly in Bangkok and other places.

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Parliamentary chaos also may help the king, who is far more than an actual constitutional monarch. As I previously noted, too: “Civilian political chaos leads Thais to focus on…parliamentary games, reducing people’s bandwidth to focus on some of the king’s dubious actions, including directly intervening in politics, taking personal control of the Crown Property Bureau and its $30 billion worth of assets, and treating women around him poorly.”

Without Pheu Thai at the helm (new elections do not have to be held until 2027), parliament could collapse, causing a snap election. Such an election, if free, almost surely would be won by Move Forward, which won a major amount of the vote in the last election in 2023.

A Move Forward triumph would never be acceptable to the military and palace. Move Forward supports major military reforms, including possibly eventually putting the military under clear civilian rule, as well as reforms that would significantly reduce the power of the monarchy and its lese majeste laws.  These are actions supported by significant numbers of young Thais, and even increasingly older and middle-class Thai people. They are probably backed by a sizable majority of all Thais.

So, if parliament collapses, which is certainly possible, and a snap election happens that Move Forward wins, the armed forces – which earlier seemed willing to wait before acting – might no longer be willing to sit back.  Yes, in the past, the military launched coups in order to rewrite constitutions, and first tried to have other institutions like the judiciary destroy progressive actors first. But now they may have no choice, and in the last middle or higher-income country in the world that still has coups, a putsch is hardly out of the question.

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