Pita Limjaroenrat Upended Thailand’s Politics

Pita Limjaroenrat doesn’t appear to be a defeated man. The 42-year-old former tech govt strides into the assembly room of his upstart Transfer Ahead Get together’s Bangkok headquarters sporting an immaculate navy-blue swimsuit, fuchsia necktie, and a winsome grin. It’s not lengthy earlier than our dialogue on Thai politics takes a not unwelcome detour into sport and music, significantly Pita’s fondness of rugby from his childhood in rural New Zealand, in addition to his love of taking part in guitar and rock bands like Metallica, Iron Maiden, and Radiohead. “If I mentioned I like Coldplay, no person would vote for me!” he quips.

However vote for him, they did. Transfer Ahead, led by Pita, gained Thailand’s common election in Could, securing 38% of common assist on the again of a radical manifesto to bridle the nation’s elite energy nexus centered on its navy, royal palace, and enterprise conglomerates, capturing the creativeness of particularly youthful Thais determined to throw off many years of paternalistic rule. By all rights, having gained a plurality 151 parliamentary seats, our dialog shouldn’t be happening on the eighth flooring of a smog-wreathed workplace block however 5 miles west in Bangkok’s Twenties neo-Gothic Authorities Home.

Nevertheless, after the election outcomes had been introduced, that very same entrenched institution that Pita railed in opposition to on the stump whirred into motion. Pita’s bid to turn into Prime Minister was blocked by the nation’s military-appointed Senate, and he was hit by a flurry of authorized challenges. One cost, that he secretly held shares in a media firm, the defunct iTV, resulted in a ban on Pita serving as a lawmaker in response to Thailand’s byzantine election guidelines. (Pita denies any wrongdoing.)

After months of post-election jostling, on Aug. 22, 61-year-old property tycoon Srettha Thavisin was as a substitute confirmed into the highest job by parliamentary vote due to his second-place Pheu Thai Get together ditching its temporary coalition with Transfer Ahead to as a substitute ally with 10 institution and royalist events. With that, Pita’s daring and common agenda to reform Thailand’s controversial royal defamation regulation, finish navy conscription, and break up its enterprise monopolies had been consigned to the scrapheap.

Learn Extra: Thailand’s Populist Pheu Thai Get together Lastly Received the Prime Minister Vote—However at What Price?

It was a triumph of “outdated politics over new,” says Thitinan Pongsudhirak, professor of political science at Chulalongkorn College in Bangkok. “Outdated politics is horse-trading, pork-barreling, patronage; new politics is extra clear and accountable, which is what the Transfer Ahead Get together exemplifies and advocates.”

To have come so shut solely to have victory snatched away would ship many individuals right into a bitter spiral. The final twenty years of Thai politics have been marked by disregarded voters being urged onto the road in often-bloody protests. Pita, nevertheless, is sanguine. “I’m extraordinarily proud,” he says. “Originally of the marketing campaign, most political pundits gave me 30 seats. So I beat their expectations 5 instances!”

Pita greets supporters in Pattaya, Thailand, July 22, 2023.

Lauren DeCicca—Getty Photographs

It’s a laudable outlook although one many Transfer Ahead supporters battle to share. For them, Could’s election victory was a turning level, the second when Thailand modified, and the truth that nothing successfully did has engendered a deep sense of betrayal throughout the nation of 70 million. Within the northern metropolis of Chiang Mai, one piece of graffiti scrawled on a visitors signal at a busy intersection mentioned all of it: “Why isn’t Pita prime minister?”

It is a query that Pita has needed to wrestle with himself. Within the rapid aftermath of his victory, he spent days on a victory tour of far-flung provinces congratulating supporters. Some have recommended he ought to have stayed in Bangkok to construct assist from different events and senators.

In fact, fashionable politics hinges on how far to compromise, gauging to what extent the need to enact change justifies diluting that change itself. Pita’s relentless concentrating on of Thailand’s royal defamation regulation, often called lèse-majesté or Article 112, struck on the institution’s most cherished shibboleths. Since November 2020, greater than 200 folks have been arrested below Article 112 referring to actions at pro-democracy rallies and feedback made on social media. They embody a 26-year-old man jailed for 3 years in March for promoting satirical calendars that includes a rubber duck—a pro-democracy protest image.

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Learn Extra: Thai Teen Jailed for Mocking the King as Prospects of Royal Defamation Reform Dim

Nonetheless, Transfer Ahead was the one celebration dedicated to curbing Article 112, and reneging on that pledge was by no means an choice for Pita. “I used to be prepared to be versatile,” he insists. “However a flat-out dishonest maneuver as a way to have this interview in Authorities Home? I could not do it.”


Not all events felt the identical. A lot of the ire for Transfer Ahead’s sidelining has been directed at Pheu Thai, which for greater than twenty years performed the position of Thailand’s anti-establishment foil and has seen its personal previous elected leaders ousted in navy and judicial coups however nonetheless entered an unholy marriage of comfort with the very forces it as soon as campaigned in opposition to to safe energy.

Compounding the sense of gross perfidy, Pheu Thai’s de facto patriarch, billionaire former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, returned from 15 years in self-imposed exile on the identical day that Srettha was confirmed as Prime Minister. Thaksin was arrested on the airport and sentenced to eight years for historic in absentia convictions of corruption and abuse of energy, although inside hours the 74-year-old was transferred from his jail cell to a hospital suite amid persistent rumors and experiences of a forthcoming royal pardon.

That Pheu Thai seemingly did a deal that retains Transfer Ahead out of energy in alternate for Thaksin’s return has enraged a lot of its personal voters, a few of whom burned effigies outdoors its headquarters. Even harmless choc-mint drinks had been instantly rendered objects of scorn, as they’re identified to be a favourite of Thaksin’s daughter, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, prompting many cafes to refuse to promote them. Thai artists have flooded social media with sardonic photos of treachery, reminiscent of tanks wrapped in crimson shirts—the enduring image of Pheu Thai’s firebrand supporters.

Pita joins an illustration—demanding the discharge of two younger pro-democracy activists who had been detained for criticizing the monarchy—at Tha Phae Gate in Chiang Mai, Thailand, Feb. 4, 2023.

Pongmanat Tasiri—SOPA/LightRocket/Getty Photographs

Was Pita frolicked to dry by Pheu Thai as a way to convey Thaksin house? For Pita, personally, the topic of betrayal is advanced. Thaksin was his mentor as a younger man and even penned his advice letter to Harvard. When Thaksin was first ousted by a coup d’état throughout a go to to the U.N. Basic Meeting in New York in 2006, Pita was touring alongside him. Right now, Pita might not be carrying Thaksin’s bag however he’s reluctant to throw him below a bus both.

“He has each political and civil proper to return to Thailand,” says Pita, “similar to all of the political refugees which were chased away from their very own nation for the previous 20 years.”

In fact, if anybody can sympathize with an ignored common mandate it’s Thaksin.  Earlier than Could’s poll, populist events backed by the policeman-turned-media mogul gained each election since 2001, solely to be deposed thrice by the navy and twice by the courts. (One Thaksin proxy, former Prime Minster Samak Sundaravej, was farcically ousted in 2008 over 5,000 baht ($350) he acquired in journey bills for internet hosting a televised cooking present.)

That Thaksin has switched from sufferer of Thailand’s anti-democratic elite to their ally and enabler is, on the very least, a merciless lesson in realpolitik. “Earlier than the election, I did imagine that [Pheu Thai] had been a part of the bigger power to show Thailand towards democracy,” says Pita. Now, nevertheless, he fears their aim was “to turn into the federal government at no matter price they needed to bear.”

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“I hope the return of Thaksin and Pheu Thai’s efforts to kind a authorities had been decoupled,” he provides. “However I do not know if my hope is true or not.”


Pita could have usurped Thaksin as anathema of the Thai institution, although for an anti-elitist, he’s very a lot the iconoclast. Born in Bangkok to an prosperous and politically related household, Pita was privileged sufficient to attend secondary college in Hamilton, New Zealand, the place he says he gained his political awakening. Again then, there have been solely three TV channels, and given the selection between watching the Australian cleaning soap opera House and Away and parliamentary debates, he selected the latter, listening to the speeches of then Prime Minister Jim Bolger whereas he did his homework.

“I’d take a look at the way in which agriculture is finished in Thailand versus New Zealand, the way in which schooling in Bangkok compares to Hamilton,” he says. “All these issues performed a significant basis of how I view the world, how I view democracy, and the way I view politics.”

After finishing his undergraduate diploma in finance and banking at Bangkok’s Thammasat College, Pita enrolled on the College of Texas at Austin, the place he acquired his first style of American retail politics through the 2000 presidential election between then Texas Governor George W. Bush and Vice President Al Gore. “I might really feel the vibe; folks had been actually lively residents; there have been Bush indicators in entrance of their lawns; they had been volunteering,” Pita remembers. “So I understood that American politics is a distinct degree than what I had seen again house or in New Zealand.”

Pita returned to Thailand at age 25 to take over the household enterprise, CEO Agrifood, after the loss of life of his father. Regardless of his youth and inexperience, he helped the corporate recuperate from large money owed to turn into one in all Asia’s largest producers of rice bran oil.

However politics was at all times his intention, and Pita quickly returned to the U.S. to finish a joint grasp’s diploma from MIT and Harvard in enterprise and public coverage. It was the run-up to President Barack Obama’s 2012 election victory and proved massively instructive. “Obama was coming rather a lot to talk at Harvard; John Kerry was there on a regular basis, so I’d convey a brown bag lunch to listen to them,” remembers Pita. “And I noticed how that they had a cellphone sales space, and would knock on doorways, and inform folks the place to go vote, and the way you register the vote prematurely, and the way essential it was to name folks and remind them.”

In 2018, after working in banking and administration consultancy and a short stint as the chief director of Seize Thailand, Pita joined Transfer Ahead’s predecessor celebration, Future Ahead, the place he was tasked with agricultural coverage. He was elected to parliament in 2019 and shortly earned a repute as a rising star on the again of impassioned speeches in regards to the plight of the nation’s farmers. In March 2020, Thailand’s Constitutional Court docket dissolved Future Ahead and banned its executives from politics for 10 years. When Transfer Ahead rose from its ashes, Pita emerged as a key chief.

Pita waves to the supporters whereas holding his daughter on the MFP last rally on Could 12 in Bangkok.

Sirachai Arunrugstichai—Getty Photographs

Pita’s rise on the political stage, nevertheless, got here with better scrutiny on his life behind the scenes. In 2019, Pita’s marriage to Thai actress and mannequin Chutima Teenpanart fell aside. It was an acrimonious divorce throughout which Chutima accused Pita of being controlling and abusive. Pita strenuously denies bodily injuring his ex-wife, and the case was dismissed in court docket, although she in flip mentioned that “violence could not have been a difficulty however he did hurt me psychologically.” Earlier this yr, Chutima signaled her assist for Pita’s election marketing campaign. “It’s been a very long time. Let it go. In any case, I’m cheering for Pipim’s dad,” she posted on-line, referencing their seven-year-old daughter whom they share custody of and who regularly joined her father at Transfer Ahead rallies.

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Pita says he’s “in no way” stunned that allegations about his personal life had been seized upon by political opponents. “I have been making ready to turn into a politician since my 20s,” he shrugs.


The query stays what comes subsequent for Pita—and Thailand. The nation seems extra polarized than ever, with its largest celebration shut out of energy ostensibly resulting from its efforts to amend Article 112. For many years, Thailand’s royal household was a unifying power. Right now, nevertheless, it’s been recast because the fault-line by which politics are outlined.

It’s a schism that guarantees to deepen after Thailand’s Constitutional Court docket agreed to listen to a case in opposition to Transfer Ahead relating to whether or not its marketing campaign to reform lèse-majesté constitutes treason. Particularly, the suggestion by the celebration’s deputy secretary-general Rangsiman Rome that Thailand ought to change its nationwide day from Dec. 5—the birthday of beloved former King Bhumibol Adulyadej—to June 24, the day the nation moved from absolute to constitutional monarchy, was seized upon by royalists as proof of republican intent. A responsible verdict might see the celebration dissolved, like Future Ahead earlier than it, and celebration executives banned from politics for all times, or probably even jailed.

Requested about Rangsiman’s remarks, Pita admits that “the cadence was a bit off,” although he says that “range is a power of our celebration, not a weak point.” Pita insists that his aim was by no means to tarnish the monarchy however to put it “above politics,” which, he says, is the surest approach to make sure its longevity as “a significant establishment of nationwide unity.”

Being squeezed out of energy and threatened with dissolution and jail may not look like a cause to have fun. Nonetheless, the stakes had been at all times plain, and Pita, like Future Ahead’s leaders earlier than him, was prepared to pay the prices. “They’re already ready for this,” says ​​Goal Sinpeng, a senior lecturer on the College of Sydney. “It’s a celebration that does not run on cash, however on concepts and beliefs, as a result of it is a motion.”

Thailand’s progressive motion stays “in a really sturdy place,” agrees Napon Jatusripitak, a visiting fellow on the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore. “They’ll ban Pita or dissolve the celebration, however by doing that, they’ll solely crystalize this motion into stronger assist for its future incarnation.”

Pita seems to drift above the uncertainty. If Transfer Ahead will get to take a spot within the opposition: “We will do much more to offer checks and balances in parliament and converse on the behalf of the folks,” he says. And if he’s banned, then he is aware of there are a lot of others ready to take up the trigger.

“I’m not planning to be in Thai politics perpetually,” he says, revealing intentions to maybe discover a job in worldwide organizations just like the U.N. “I do not wish to be 70 or 80 and sleeping within the parliament and talking nonsense about blockchain and AI! I need to have the ability to go the baton to the following technology of leaders.”

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Write to Charlie Campbell at [email protected].

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