Thai court ruling deals new blow to government

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By THANYARAT DOKSONE
Riot policemen stand guard as an anti-government protester waves a Thai national flag in front of Constitutional Court in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. The top court on Wednesday rejected the ruling party’s attempt to amend the constitution, dealing a defeat to a government that has been plagued by mass street protests. The court’s ruling, however, spared the government a worst-case scenario by turning down a request from opponents to dissolve the ruling party. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Thailand Constitutional Battle

Anti-government protesters blow whistles during a rally in front of Constitutional Court in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. The top court on Wednesday rejected the ruling party’s attempt to amend the constitution, dealing a defeat to a government that has been plagued by mass street protests. The court’s ruling, however, spared the government a worst-case scenario by turning down a request from opponents to dissolve the ruling party. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Thailand Constitutional Battle

Riot policemen stand guard at Constitutional court as anti-government protesters gather outside in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Thailand’s beleaguered government, plagued by street protests over an ill-advised attempt to help ousted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, faces a fresh challenge Wednesday when a court rules on its attempt to amend the constitution. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Thailand Constitutional Battle

Riot policemen stand guard at Constitutional court in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. Thailand’s beleaguered government, plagued by street protests over an ill-advised attempt to help ousted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, faces a fresh challenge Wednesday when a court rules on its attempt to amend the constitution. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Thailand Constitutional Battle

An anti-government protester shouts slogans in front of Constitutional Court in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013. The top court on Wednesday rejected the ruling party’s attempt to amend the constitution, dealing a defeat to a government that has been plagued by mass street protests. The court’s ruling, however, spared the government a worst-case scenario by turning down a request from opponents to dissolve the ruling party. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

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BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand’s embattled government received a sharp scolding Wednesday from the country’s top court, with a ruling on constitutional change suggesting that the conservative political establishment is still not ready to reconcile with forces supporting former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 military coup.

The ruling Pheu Thai party of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, Thaksin’s sister, escaped the worst-case scenario when the Constitutional Court ruled that although it had acted illegally in passing a bill to amend the constitution, its offense did not merit disbanding the party.

However, the court chastised lawmakers for failing to value “righteousness” as highly as their mandate from the voters.

“Democracy is not just about elections,” the court said in its ruling. “It does not give a mandate for representatives to use their power without considering what is right, and legal under the rule of law.”

The ruling suggests that the court could strike down any legislative effort to amend the constitution if it believes the change would allow lawmakers to “acquire the power to rule the country by any means which is not in accordance with the modes provided in the 2007 constitution.”

The constitutional amendment pushed by Yingluck’s government had sought to change the Senate into a fully elected body. Currently about half its members are selected by a panel of judges and heads of independent state agencies.

Yingluck swept to power with an absolute majority in the lower house in 2011 elections after a military crackdown on Thaksin’s supporters a year earlier left more than 90 people dead.

In broad terms, the ruling party followed procedures spelled out in the 2007 charter for changing the constitution. The court, however, criticized it for various violations that occurred during the amendment process.

The ruling effectively gives the court the power to block any significant political reform by any government, even if it holds an absolute legislative majority, as does Yingluck’s.

The court’s action is the latest chapter in the long-running political war between backers of Thaksin and his opponents in Thailand’s old conservative political establishment, led by the military and supporters of the monarchy.

Thaksin was ousted after being accused of corruption and disrespect for Thailand’s constitutional monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

The courts, which are bastions of royalism, have consistently ruled against Thaksin’s interests. Appointed senators also have been among the leaders of the crusade against Thaksin.

“The political situation in Thailand right now can be summed up in these words: we are now living under a ‘Constitutional Court’ monarchy,” said Assistant Professor Thamrongsak Lertpetchanan, a political scientist at Rangsit University.

With Thaksin’s side holding an overwhelming electoral mandate, the court is “the last fortress of the establishment and the authoritarians,” he said ahead of Wednesday’s ruling. “This is a war between the legislative branch and the judicial branch.”

Thaksin’s supporters know this all too well. Court rulings in 2006 encouraged his opponents before the coup, and in 2008 forced out two pro-Thaksin prime ministers who were already under pressure from street demonstrations. Thaksin’s opponents usually face lenient action.

Wednesday’s ruling is likely to bolster activism by Thaksin’s foes, who have been demonstrating in Bangkok’s streets for several weeks. They have been reacting to an effort by Yingluck’s government to include Thaksin in a proposed amnesty for political offenders. The government attempted to ram the legislation through Parliament but backed down in response to public outrage.

Thaksin’s opponents, especially in the opposition Democrat Party, have attempted to build on that outrage to bring down the government. They are trying to have lawmakers who voted for the amnesty impeached.

“I’d like to thank the nine judges for delivering justice,” said Somchai Sawaengkarn, a senator who helped bring the case before the court. “The verdict sets a precedent that shows the balance in Thai democracy — that the legislative, judicial and executive branches must work to balance one another.”

The court, while specific in its ruling on procedural errors made by the ruling party, was less clear in rejecting the contents of the amendment, although it said a provision allowing close relatives of lower house lawmakers to run for the Senate could lead to a lack of checks and balances and turn the legislature into “a husband and wife Parliament.”

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