Parliament to open amid ballots issue


King Maha Vaji­ra­longkorn has open­ed parliament yesterday, as last month’s general election result faces court scrutiny over barcodes on the ballots that may have viola­ted the law.

The barcodes might undermine the secrecy of the ballot, said the country’s Office of the Ombuds­man, which petitioned the Consti­tutional Court to consider the case.

Prime Minister Anutin Charn­virakul’s Bhumjaithai Party won a clear victory in the Feb 8 election, but the ombudsman said late on Friday that there had been 21 complaints from the public that barcodes and QR codes on the ballots could potentially be used to identify which party or candidate a given voter had chosen.

The court annulled a 2006 election on the grounds that the voting process had not been conducted in secret.

The Election Commission has said the barcodes were included for security purposes and that identifying a voter would require access to the upper half of the ballots, which were securely stored.

Bhumjaithai, which won at least 191 seats in the 500-member parliament, has said it will form a ruling coalition with the third-place Pheu Thai Party and several smaller groups, giving the alliance more than 290 seats and raising the prospect of a stable government after years of political volatility.

Lawmakers are scheduled to reconvene today to endorse a new house speaker and two deputy speakers.

Deputy Prime Minister Sophon Zaram, a veteran Bhumjaithai politician, told reporters on Thursday that the party had nominated him for the speaker’s post.

The new speaker is expected to schedule a parliamentary session to vote in the prime minister.

Bhumjaithai deputy leader Siri­pong Angkasakulkiat said the vote for prime minister will likely take place on Thursday. — Reuters

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