General Information
At Stake in this Election:
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All 500 seats of the Thai House of Representatives
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Chief of State: King Maha VAJIRALONGKORN / Rama X (since 1 December 2016)
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Head of Government: Prime Minister PRAYUT Chan-o-cha (since July 2019)
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Prayut carried out a coup in 2014 and was appointed interim prime minister shortly thereafter. He was formally nominated and approved by parliament in 2019.
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Assembly: bicameral National Assembly (Ratthasapha / รัฐสภา) including a 250-seat Senate (Wuthisapha / วุฒิสภา) and a 500-seat House of Representatives (Saphaphuthan Rasadon / สภาผู้แทนราษฎร)
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The King is a hereditary monarch.
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The Prime Minister is nominated by the House of Representatives and Senate, and then confirmed by the King. The Prime Minister may serve for up to 8 years.
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From 2024 on, the Senate will not participate in the nomination process.
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All 250 senators are selected by the National Council for Peace and Order (คสช.) and appointed by the King, and they serve 5-year terms. In 2024, the Senate will be reduced to 200 seats.
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In the House of Representatives, 400 members are directly elected by plurality vote in single-seat constituencies. The remaining 100 members are elected by party-list proportional representation vote in a single nationwide constituency. All members serve 4-year terms.
Last Election:
In 2019, the Pheu Thai Party won the most seats (136), followed by Palang Pracharath (116), Future Forward (81), the Democrat Party (52), and Bhumjaithai Party (51). Twenty-one additional parties also won seats. Voter turnout was 74.69%.
Voters will receive two ballots: one with candidates in the relevant single-seat constituency and one with party lists for the national seats. This ballot system was introduced in 2001 and was briefly replaced by a single ballot for the 2019 election. The seat distribution will also change slightly, from 350 single-seat constituency representatives to 400 and from 150 party-list representatives to 100.
Key Deadlines:
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Candidate filing deadline: 7 April 2023
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Voter registration deadline: N/A, registration is automatic and compulsory
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Overseas and early voting (7 May) voter registration deadline: 9 April 2023
Main Parties in this Election:
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Pheu Thai / พรรครวมไทยสร้างชาติ
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Leader: CHOLANAN Srikaew
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Seats won in last election: 136 out of 500
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United Thai Nation / พรรคเพื่อไทย
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Leader: PRAYUT Chan-o-cha
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Seats won in last election: 0 out of 500 (founded in 2021)
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Palang Pracharath / พรรคพลังประชารัฐ
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Leader: PRAWIT Wongsuwan
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Seats won in last election: 116 out of 500
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Move Forward / พรรคก้าวไกล
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Leader: PITA Limjaroenrat
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Seats won in last election: 0 out of 500
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Formed by members of the dissolved Future Forward party (81 out of 500 seats)
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Bhumjaithai / พรรคภูมิใจไทย
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Leader: ANUTIN Charnvirakul
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Seats won in last election: 51 out of 500
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Democrat Party / พรรคประชาธิปัตย์
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Leader: JURIN Laksanawisit
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Seats won in last election: 52 out of 500
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Chart Thai Pattana / พรรคชาติไทยพัฒนา
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Leader: VARAWUT Silpa-archa
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Seats won in last election: 10 out of 500
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Thai Sang Thai / พรรคไทยสร้างไทย
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Leader: SUDARAT Keyuraphan
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Seats won in last election: 0 out of 500 (founded in 2021)
Population and Registered Voters:
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Population: 71,801,279 (2023 est.)
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Registered Voters: 51,239,638 (2019)
Gender Data:
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Female Population: 36,821,169 (2023 est.)
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CEDAW Status: Ratified (by accession) 9 August 1985
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Gender Quota: None
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Female Candidates in this election: Yes
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Number of Female Legislators (pre-election): 74 out of 445 (16.6%) in the House of Representatives and 26 out of 249 (10.4%) in the Senate
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Human Development Index (HDI) Position: 0.800, Very High, Rank 66 (2021)
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Social Institutions and Gender Index (SIGI) Categorization: 26.8 (2023)
Disability Data:
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CRPD Status: Signed 30 March 2007, Ratified 29 July 2008
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Projected population with a disability: 1,579,628 (2023 est.)
IFES Resources:
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Does IFES have a presence in Thailand: Yes, programming
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Election Access: Yes
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Election Judgements: Yes; 8 resources