By: Staff
The 43-year-old led his Move Forward Party (MFP) to a shock first-place finish in May's general election, buoyed by young and urban Thais weary of a near-decade of military rule – only to be prevented from becoming premier by royalist and pro-military blocs opposed to his reformist agenda.
MFP's former allies Pheu Thai then formed a coalition government with army-linked parties, leaving the progressive challengers back on the opposition bench – and Pita perhaps in the political wilderness.
He also faces a legal challenge thrown at him after the election that could see him banned from running for years.
But in an interview with AFP, he vowed to take another tilt at the premiership.
"Of course. I'm not giving up, and it's just a matter of time," he said when asked if he planned to run again.
But a number of roadblocks remain, not least his suspension as an MP.
MFP won the most seats in the May 14 poll but fell short of an outright majority and joined forces with Pheu Thai.
However, a candidate needs a majority across both houses of parliament to become prime minister and Pita could not muster enough votes to overcome opposition in the junta-appointed Senate.
He lost a first vote, then was blocked from running in a second ballot for the premiership and suspended as an MP by the Constitutional Court over his ownership of media shares, prohibited for lawmakers under Thai law.
Pita denies any wrongdoing and said he was "very confident" about the case.
"It was the old guard, someone who found a loophole that they can use constitutional hardball," he said of the media share case.
- Warning the 'old guard' -
This "old guard" a powerful establishment of senior military, royalists and super-wealthy business clans has dominated Thai politics for decades, both overtly and behind the scenes.
MFP's campaign promises to reform the army, soften royal defamation laws and break up monopolies cut to the heart of this elite's interests.
While much of the resistance to Pita's mooted premiership cited his lese majeste pledges, accusing him of undermining the monarchy, he said this was a "shield" covering the other "two Ms" – monopolies and the military.
Pita said he remained optimistic and said "everything can be changed" despite the setbacks.
Thai voters had shown that they were looking for an alternative "and they're willing to go with a road less travelled", he said.
He pointed to South Korea and Indonesia, which transformed from long periods of military rule to democracy in the 1980s and 1990s.
https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20231109-thwarted-thai-pm-candidate-pita-vows-to-run-again-afp-interview-1