Thai government survives key test with budget vote

Thai government survives key test with budget vote

BANGKOK: Thailand's coalition government, led by a former military government leader, survived ..

BANGKOK: Thailand's coalition government, led by a former military government leader, survived a key parliamentary challenge on Saturday (Oct 19) after opponents abstained to let the first reading of its draft 2020 budget Bill through.

Defeat would have forced the government to either resign or dissolve parliament according to the constitution.

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The Bill passed with 251 votes, 234 lawmakers abstained and one person did not vote. There were 486 lawmakers present in the lower house.

The vote came after three days of debate and was a test for the 16-party coalition government that has a wafer-thin majority in the 500-member house.

However, the draft Bill still has to go through second and third readings in January before being submitted for royal approval. Opposition politicians, who say the budget allotment was not fairly distributed, could demand changes at these later stages.

The proposed budget for the 2020 fiscal year that began on Oct 1 is for 3.2 trillion baht (US$105.68 billion), a 6 per cent increase from 2019.

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Opposition politicians have criticized the government for a 10 per cent increase in the central budget that can be allocated at the discretion of the former military government leader, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha. They are also unhappy with a 2.7 per cent increase in the defence budget that has risen continuously since the military seized power in 2014.

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