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House of Representatives of Thailand สภาผู้แทนราษฎรไทย Sapha Phu Thaen Ratsadon Thai |
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| Type | |
| Type | Lower house |
| Leadership | |
| Speaker | Chai Chidchob, (Friends of Newin Group) since May 15, 2008 |
| Leader of the
Governing Coalition and Prime Minister of Thailand |
Abhisit
Vejjajiva, (Democrat) since December 15, 2008 |
| Structure | |
| Members | 480 MPs |
| Political groups | For Thais Party, Democrat Party, For the Motherland, Thais United National Development Party, Royalist People's Party, Thai Nation Development Party, Proud Thais Party, Social Action Party Others |
| Election | |
| Last election | December 23, 2007 |
| Meeting place | |
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| Parliament House of Thailand | |
| Website | |
| www.parliament.go.th | |
| Thailand |
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The House of Representatives of the Kingdom of Thailand (Thai: สภาผู้แทนราษฎร; RTGS: Sapha Phu Thaen Ratsadon Thai) is the lower house of the National Assembly of Thailand, the legislative branch of the Thai Government. The system of government of Thailand is that of a Constitutional Monarchy and a Parliamentary Democracy. The system of the Thai legislative branch was modeled after the Westminster system. The House of Representatives has 480 Members: 400 Members are democratically elected through single constituency elections, while the other 80 are appointed accordingly through proportional representation. The roles and powers of the House of Representatives have been enshrined in the Constitution of 2007.
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The House of Representatives was established after the Revolution of 1932, when the Khana Ratsadon (the "People’s Party"), overthrew the absolute monarchy and replaced it with the present system of constitutional monarchy. When King Prajadhipok signed the Temporary Constitution of 1932, he established the first legislative assembly in Thailand, however, it was an entirely royally-appointed chamber. The first session of the People’s Assembly was held on June 28, 1932, in the Ananda Samakhom Throne Hall. From then on, the House existed in various forms until the present form in 2007:
See more at: Constitutions of Thailand
The qualifications to be a candidate for the House of Representatives are outlined in Section 101, Part 2, Chapter 6 of the 2007 Constitution. The candidate must be a citizen of Thailand by birth only. The citizen must be at the age of twenty-five or older on Election Day and having been born in the province in which he or she intends to stand as a candidate. The candidate must have been a voter and therefore on the electoral register for at least five years directly before the election, and he or she must also have a house or been in public service in the province for five years. The candidate must also have been a member of an educational institution in that province for at least five consecutive years. Politically, a candidate must be a member of one political party for a period of at least ninety days before Election Day, except in cases of dissolution where thirty days is the minimum period. This is done to discourage party switching before the election. For party list candidates, they must also meet the same qualifications except for the provincial restrictions. They are instead divided in lists based on 'provincial groups'.
Those specifically barred from being candidates and therefore members of the House are individuals who were: addicted to drugs, declared bankrupt, unable to vote (see voter eligibility bellow), a former convicted felon (the individual must wait for five years after release to be eligible), removed from public service for being corrupt or incompetent, had assets confiscated due to embezzlement; and finally, the individual must not be a member of the: government or civil service, Senate, local administrations, member of the judiciary or other independent agencies.
The House of Representatives has 480 members. 400 members are directly elected in single constituency elections based on the First Past the Post system. The 400 constituencies are divided by population according to the census and provincial division.
The other 80 members are appointed based on ‘proportional representation’ it is actually in truth a Parallel voting system or more precisely the Mixed Member Majoritarian system (MMM). In Thai general elections, the voters have two votes: one to select their Member of Parliament for their constituency and the second to choose which ever party they prefer more. Seats are assigned to parties as a result through party lists. 10 MPs per the 8 Party-list Areas, as follows:
In accordance with the 2007 Constitution of Thailand, a general election must be held every 4 years. Dissolution can happen anytime, which is done by the King with the advice of the Prime Minister through the use of the Royal Decree. Elections are held under universal suffrage; every voter must be a citizen of Thailand; if not by birth then by being a citizen for 5 years. Must be over 18 years old before the year the election is held. The voter must have also registered ninety days before the election at his constituency. Voting in elections are also mandatory as missing an election will result in minor tax penalties. Those barred from voting in House elections are: members of the clergy, those suspended from the privilege for various reasons, detainees under legal or court orders and being of unsound mind or of mental infirmity.
See most recent election at: Thai general election, 2007
The term of the House of Representatives is exactly four years from the previous Election Day. Upon the expiration of the House, the king will issue a Royal Decree calling for a general election of the House, in which the date of the election must be announced; this must be done within forty days of the expiration. The date of the election must be the same for the entire kingdom.
The king holds the Royal prerogative to dissolve the House before its expiration. When this happens a Royal Decree is issue where the election date is announced; this must be done no less than forty days and not more than sixty days from the date of dissolution. The reasons and circumstances of a dissolution can be made only once.
Members of the House of Representatives are generally called: Members of Parliament or MPs (Thai: สมาชิกสภาผู้แทนราษฎร or ส.ส.). The membership of the House of Representatives commences on Election Day. If there is a vacancy in the membership of the House, and it was not due to expiration or dissolution, it must be re-occupied. Vacancies may occur due to: death, resignation, being convicted and being expelled (only by parliamentary party through a 3/4 majority vote). If the vacancy is of a constituency member then an election must be held within forty days of the vacancy, unless less than 180 days of the present term of the House remains, the vacancy can remain.
In the case where the vacancy is made by a proportional representative member, the vacancy will be filled by the Speaker of the House of Representatives by submitting the name of the next candidate in the party list (submitted on election day) to be published in the Royal Gazette. This must be done within seven days. If no name is to be founded then the vacancy can remain unfilled. Members of the House who has filled a vacancy under either of these procedures can only remain in the House for the remainder of its present term.
According to the 2007 Constitution of Thailand, the House of Representatives is granted many powers, most of them are shared with Senate of Thailand. These common powers are:
Exclusive powers:
No member of the House can be arrested, detained or summoned by a warrant for an inquiry as the suspect in a criminal case unless permission of the House of which he or she is a member is obtained or he or she is arrested in flagrante delicto.
The executive committee of House of Representatives consists of one Speaker and two Deputy Speakers to be its presiding officers. The Speaker of the House is also the ex officio President of the National Assembly of Thailand. The election is done by secret ballot in the first session; after a resolution is passed; the elected will be formally approved by the King. The Speaker and Deputy Speakers of the House cannot be a member of the cabinet or any political party executive committee. The Speaker and his deputies are not entitled to represent partisan interests and must exercise their powers on a non-partisan basis. The current Officers are:[1]
The Right Honorable Chai Chidchob (MP from Party-List 4th Area, Buri Ram Province, of the Friends of Newin Group)
The Right Honorable Samart Keawmeechai (MP from the 1st District of Chiang Rai Province, of the For Thais Party)
The Right Honorable Dr. Apiwan Wiriyachai (MP from the 2nd District of Nonthaburi Province, of the For Thais Party)
The Constitution stipulates that the Prime Minister and the Ministers must be former members of the House of Representatives. After the first session, the House must vote in a resolution to elect a Prime Minister, after which the King will formally approve him within thirty days. The Prime Minister-elect is always the leader of the largest party in the House. However, under the present electoral system, the House is most likely to result in a hung parliament. Therefore, after the general election of 2007, six parties formed a governing coalition, electing Samak Sundaravej of the largest party, the now banned PPP, the Prime Minister.
The House voted 310 for Samak and 163 for Abhisit. The six-party governing coalition was made up of: the now banned PPP, PRP, Pua Paendin, RJCPP, the now banned MCMP and the now banned CTP. Leaving the Democrat Party as an opposition party. In September 2008, the House elected Somchai Wongsawat after the resignation of Samak as the leader of the governing coalition to a vote of 298 against 163 for Abhisit. On December 2, 2008, the Constitutional Court dissolved the PPP, the CTP, and the MCMPthereby ending the governing coalition.[2]
On December 15, 2008, the House elected Abhisit Vejjajiva Prime Minister against Pracha Promnok of the successor to the PPP, the For Thais Party, to a vote of 234 for and 198 against and 3 abstaining.
The Honorable Abhisit Vejjajiva (MP from Party-List 6th Area, Bangkok Metropolitan Area, of the Democrat Party)
After the appointment of the Cabinet, the King appointed the official Leader of the Opposition of Thailand. The Leader of the Opposition must be the leader of the largest party with no members holding any ministerial positions. His party must be larger than 1/5 of the total number of the House. If no Party meets this qualification then the Leader with most votes from parties with no ministerial positions will then be appointed. The Royal appointment must be countersigned by the President of the National Assembly. The Leader of the Opposition will lead the Shadow Cabinet of Thailand.
vacant
| Party | Constituency | Proportional | TOTAL | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | ||
| People's Power Party | 26,293,456 | 36.63 | 199 | 14,071,799 | 39.60 | 34 | 233 |
| Democrat Party | 21,745,696 | 30.30 | 132 | 14,084,265 | 39.63 | 33 | 165 |
| Thai Nation Party | 6,363,475 | 8.87 | 33 | 1,545,282 | 4.35 | 4 | 37 |
| For the Motherland | 6,599,422 | 9.19 | 17 | 1,981,021 | 5.57 | 7 | 24 |
| Thais United National Development Party | 3,395,197 | 4.73 | 8 | 948,544 | 2.67 | 1 | 9 |
| Neutral Democratic Party | 3,844,673 | 5.36 | 7 | 528,464 | 1.49 | 0 | 7 |
| Royalist People's Party | 1,632,795 | 2.27 | 4 | 750,158 | 2.11 | 1 | 5 |
| Others | 1,897,953 | 2.64 | — | 1,626,234 | 4.58 | — | 0 |
| Valid votes | 71,772,667* | 100 | 400 | 35,535,767 | 100 | 80 | 480 |
| No Votes | 906,216 | 2.32 | |||||
| Invalid Votes | 2,539,429 | 6.51 | |||||
| Total Turnout | 38,981,412 | 85.38 | |||||
| Source: The Nation * As constituencies elect between one and three MPs, some people have two or three votes. |
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| Parties | Leader | Previous seats | Changes | Current seats | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| For Thais Party formerly PPP | Yongyuth Wichaidit | 232 | (-45) | 187 | ||
| Democrat Party‡ | Abhisit Vejjajiva | 165 | (+8) | 173 | ||
| Proud Thais Party‡ formerly NDP | Chaovarat Chanweerakul | 11 | (+21) | 32 | ||
| For the Motherland‡ | Chanchai Chairungrueng | 24 | (+8) | 32 | ||
| Thai Nation Development Party‡ formerly CTP | Chumpol Silpa-archa | 34 | (-9) | 25 | ||
| Thais United National Development Party‡ | Dr. Varnarat Chanukul | 9 | 9 | |||
| Royalist People's Party | Sanoh Thienthong | 5 | (+4) | 8 | ||
| Social Action Party | Suwit Khunkitti | - | (+5) | 5 | ||
| Matubhum Party | - | (+3) | 3 | |||
| Total | 474 | |||||
| Source: The Nation.com, The Nation.com † The party and its executives were banned, but none of them [the executives] were MPs. ‡ Coalition partners |
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On December 2, 2008, the People's Power Party, the Thai Nation Party, and the Neutral Democratic Party were dissolved by the Constitutional Court of Thailand for violations of electoral laws during the election campaign of the 2007 parliamentary election. The party dissolves instantly ended the six-party coalition's rule, which was led by Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat until then. On January 11, 2009, a by-election was held to re-occupy 29 vacant seats; the results were in favor of the five-party, Democrat-led coalition, giving it 20 of the 29 seats.[3]
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