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Anutin's Bhumjaithai wins Thailand's snap vote as voters back a new charter

Anutin's Bhumjaithai wins Thailand's snap vote as voters back a new charter

The royalist-military-favoured party tops the 8 February poll on nationalism and stimulus; a referendum approves scrapping the 2017 constitution

Leaders· transition 谁说了算·悄然的转变 ·7 takes ·更新 2026年6月24日

Summary

Thailand's Bhumjaithai Party, led by caretaker PM Anutin Charnvirakul, topped the 8 February 2026 snap election with about 192 of 500 House seats, ahead of the progressive People's Party (117) and the once-dominant Pheu Thai (74) (谁说了算). The poll followed Anutin's December 2025 dissolution of parliament, itself part of a September 2025 deal with the People's Party. Bhumjaithai — favoured by the royalist-military establishment — campaigned on economic stimulus and nationalism stoked by deadly border clashes with Cambodia. A same-day referendum approved, by nearly two-thirds, replacing the 2017 constitution written after the 2014 coup, which critics say overempowered an unelected Senate (悄然的转变). Short of a majority, Anutin must build a coalition while a charter rewrite begins.

By the numbers

  • ~192 of 500 — Bhumjaithai's House seats, the most but short of a majority.
  • 117 / 74 — People's Party and Pheu Thai seats.
  • ~2/3 — referendum support for replacing the 2017 constitution.
  • 2014 — the coup whose charter voters moved to scrap.
  • Dec 2025 — Anutin's parliament dissolution that triggered the vote.

Why it matters

The establishment party's win paired with a popular mandate to rewrite the junta-era charter sets up a contradiction: an institution-favoured government tasked with dismantling the institutions' rulebook. The outcome shapes Thai democratisation, the Pheu Thai/Shinawatra decline and the Cambodia border standoff.

What to watch

  • Anutin's coalition composition and stability.
  • The constitution-drafting process and whether reforms survive establishment editing.
  • Pheu Thai's collapse and the People's Party's opposition strength.
  • The Thailand–Cambodia border situation feeding nationalist politics.