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The clarification came after several posts circulated online, falsely linking a viral video from Thailand to the senior Indian Army officer.
Thailand is holding a snap general election along with a nationwide referendum on whether to rewrite its Constitution. Here is a simple explainer on how the vote works and what it means for the country’s next government.
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Thailand woke up to a long and serious Sunday as millions stepped out to vote in an election unlike any the country has seen before. For the first time in its political history, voters are choosing a new parliament and deciding whether to rewrite the Constitution, all on the same day.
Polling stations opened at 8 am local time, according to state broadcaster Thai PBS World, and voting continued across the country under tight watch.
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This vote comes after the House of Representatives was dissolved on December 12, a full year before its four-year term was meant to end. That sudden decision forced a snap general election, putting political parties into campaign mode almost overnight.
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Now, more than 50 million eligible voters are deciding who will sit in Thailand’s 500-member lower house.
Voters are choosing 500 lawmakers from a crowded field of nearly 5,000 candidates.
Out of these seats:
400 lawmakers will be elected directly from local constituencies
100 seats will go to political parties based on their nationwide vote share
This mixed system means both local popularity and national party strength matter.
Sunday’s vote is often being called a “three-in-one” poll.
Each voter is handed three different ballots:
This nationwide constitutional referendum is a first for Thailand and could shape the country’s political future for years.
The election will decide whether caretaker Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul manages to stay in power or whether a new coalition takes over.
A total of 43 political parties have nominated candidates for prime minister.
The age range is striking. The oldest candidate is 90 years old showing how wide and unusual the field is.
Bangkok, Thailand’s most populated province, has the highest number of constituencies at 33.
It is followed by:
These regions are likely to play a major role in shaping the final result.
Election authorities must announce final official results by April 9.
Once results are certified:
The contest is mainly a battle between three major forces:
Opinion polls suggest no single party will win enough seats to rule alone. This makes coalition talks almost certain and could lead to weeks of negotiations before Thailand forms a new government.
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