Thailand’s Anutin reelected PM after crushing rival in parliamentary vote

Published 19 Mar, 2026 12:03pm 3 min read

Anutin Charnvirakul was reelected Thailand’s prime minister on Thursday after sailing through a parliamentary vote, winning ‌a fresh mandate that could usher in a rare period of stability for a country long plagued by political drama and turmoil.

The Bhumjaithai Party’s Anutin led from the start in what turned out to be a rout of his biggest rival, Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut, leader of the progressive People’s Party, the surprise runner-up last month ​in an election it had been widely expected to win.

Anutin becomes the first Thai premier to be voted back to office ​in two decades, underlining the upheaval that has dogged Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy.

In a stunning turnaround in fortunes ⁠for a party that had struggled to make its mark in Thai politics, Bhumjaithai scored a decisive election victory over its reformist rival after ​capitalising on a wave of nationalism arising out of military conflicts with Cambodia last year.

Opportunity seized

Much of Anutin’s success comes from his opportunism last year ​in seizing on the decline of the once dominant Pheu Thai party, first by abandoning its coalition government, then manoeuvring swiftly to form his own after a court sacked a second prime minister in the space of just over a year.

Bhumjaithai’s coalition pact with the politically bruised Pheu Thai and a motley crew of small ​parties stood firm in Thursday’s vote, with Anutin comfortably reaching the 251 votes needed to win reelection.

His alliance is expected to control 292 ​of the current 499 seats in parliament.

In the lead-up to the vote, Anutin, 59, pledged to get to work immediately on forming a cabinet and solving ‌Thailand’s problems.

“Your ⁠voices are equally heard,” he told rival lawmakers. “I’m ready to accept suggestions so I can carry out my duty as head of government. We all have the same goals — the well-being of the people.”

Anutin, a staunch royalist, has been a mainstay in Thai politics, weathering two decades of upheaval by positioning Bhumjaithai strategically between warring elites entangled in an intractable power struggle, which guaranteed its place in a succession of coalition ​governments.

Prospect of stability

Anutin’s election victory and ​approval by parliament give him ⁠his first clear mandate to lead in a country with a long-stuttering economy, shackled by massive household debt and facing headwinds from trade uncertainty and the fallout of the US-Israeli war on Iran.

Anutin’s survival instincts and ​ability to straddle political divides could prove his biggest asset, some analysts say, with Bhumjaithai having ​been spared the wrath ⁠of Thailand’s powerful military and judiciary, the engineers of the downfall of multiple governments and parties.

Napon Jatusripitak, a political scientist at Singapore’s ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute, said that with Bhumjaithai set to hold sway over the upper and lower houses and Thailand’s axes of institutional power appearing to be behind ⁠Anutin, the ​prospects for medium-term stability were good.

“People have strong reasons to believe that this government ​can last, particularly because it’s the first time in a long while that the referee and the players are on the same side,” Napon said.

“There’s control,” he said. “And ​we have a highly fragmented opposition.”

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