Record number of Thais turn out for early voting

People cast their ballots during early voting in Bangkok on 17 March, 2019, ahead of the 24 March general election. Lines snaked around schools, parking lots and temples across Thailand as hundreds of thousands of voters waited to cast their early ballots a week before the country's first election in eight years. (Jewel Samad / AFP Photo)

More than 2.2 million Thais turned out for early voting – almost 90 percent of those registered – for Thailand's hotly anticipated national election, as the junta's main opposition predicted a cliff-hanger to the first poll in eight years.

The 2011 election had a 55 percent turnout for advanced voting, bringing about 1.4 million early to the ballot box. But enthusiasm is soaring from a public starved of democratic processes since a 2014 coup ousted then-premier Yingluck Shinawatra – reflecting in the country's high number of early voters on Sunday. 

"There was an 86.98 percent turnout" among the 2.6 million early voters registered, Ittiporn Boonpracong, chairman of the Election Commission, said Monday.

Many voting centres had "more than 90 percent turnout", he added. 

Since the junta's takeover in 2014, leader Prayut Chan-o-cha has repeatedly postponed elections, seeding resentment among a public weary of crackdowns on dissent and political debate. 

With election day looming, voter enthusiasm is writ large across the country and online, with Thais sharing memes and engaging in online debate.

A high voter turnout could likely spell trouble for the junta-aligned Phalang Pracharat, a party fronted by Prayut as their prime ministerial candidate. 

More than seven million young Thais will be first-time voters as well, making them wildcards for a country so accustomed to neat political categories.

Pheu Thai – the country's most popular party which brought Yingluck to power in 2011 – remains confident in their chances, said Sudarat Keyuraphan, the party's prime ministerial candidate, during a campaign stop in Thailand's north-eastern Chaiyaphum province on Monday. 

"Yesterday's early voting saw people stand under the hot sun for three hours...they want to say it is time up for the dictatorship," she said.  

But the election's outcome will be difficult to predict under a junta-scripted constitution, which analysts say was designed to undermine a popular party like Pheu Thai. 

"It is not easy for us to win...but it is not easy for them (Phalang Pracharat) either," Sudarat said. 
Thousands of supporters cheered wildly as she and other party executives promised to raise rural incomes – a sign of Pheu Thai's enduring dominance in the country's northeast. 

First-time voter Sroi, 30, said the slumping sugar cane prices during the junta's rule has prodded her to become more politically active.

"I will definitely vote this time...for Pheu Thai. They have good agricultural policies," she said. - AFP