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Thailand to hold early election on Feb. 8 after parliament dissolution

BANGKOK (AP) 鈥 Thailand will hold an early election on Feb. 8, the country鈥檚 election regulator said Monday, days after dissolved the country’s parliament.

Anutin, who has been in office for only three months and is seeking another term, disbanded the legislature after the main opposition party prepared to call for a no-confidence vote over an issue of constitutional change.

The election is likely to pit Anutin鈥檚 Bhumjaithai party, which runs on a conservative platform, against the progressive People鈥檚 Party that held the largest number of seats in the House of Representatives after the 2023 general elections. Another major contender would be the populist Pheu Thai Party, backed by billionaire former prime minister .

The dissolution comes as Thailand with Cambodia over a long-standing border dispute. Anutin has adopted an aggressive military stance to appeal to nationalistic public sentiment, experts say.

His party saw a slip in popularity prior to the conflict due to the southern flood crisis that killed more than 160 people, and his government鈥檚 mishandling of major scam scandals, which tainted some officials and figures in the Thai business community.

鈥淎nutin played the nationalist card from the start of his premiership and also actively courted the military. He gave them a free hand to deal with the conflict pretty much any way they see fit, so in many ways he was building a stock of political goodwill,鈥 said Petra Alderman, researcher and manager of the Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Anutin won the September vote with support from the main opposition People鈥檚 Party in exchange for a promise to dissolve parliament within four months and organize a referendum on the drafting of a new constitution by an elected constituent assembly.

succeeded Pheu Thai鈥檚 , who served only a year in office before losing office over a scandal that erupted out of a previous round of border tensions.

Paetongtarn, Thaksin’s daughter, was suspended from office before the July fighting with Cambodia started. She was over a politically compromising call with a Cambodian official. Even before her suspension, her government was struggling, largely due to its failure to revive an economy that had stagnated since the COVID-19 pandemic.

The People鈥檚 Party, meanwhile, faced significant backlash from its supporters for backing Anutin鈥檚 premiership, given his conservative agenda, which many viewed as running counter to the party鈥檚 core principles. Analysts also see its progressive platform might backfire as the country is running high on nationalist sentiment.

鈥淕iven the military鈥檚 increasing popularity, the People鈥檚 Party might find it hard to find support for some of its progressive agenda,鈥 Alderman said. 鈥淭hings like a military reform could be much harder to sell to the voters right now, so the party might lose some of its progressive edge if it wants to cast a wide electoral net.鈥

These three major parties are likely to receive comparable vote shares and seat totals given the current circumstances, said Purawich Watanasukh, a political scientist at Bangkok鈥檚 Thammasat University.

鈥淯nder the current constitution, it is challenging for any single party to secure a majority and form a one-party government. A multi-party coalition government, similar to the pattern of recent years, remains the most likely outcome,鈥 he said.

The Election Commission said candidate registration would begin Dec 27.

Copyright © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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