Abhisit's government failed. Thailand failed. Yingluck's government fails, Thailand fails. Whats the difference? Nothing. Thailand is hopeless. Unless someone new, promising, and does it for the passion of our King and the well being of Thailand, will our country wake up and reunite to compete with the rest of the world. Politics is a thing of the past. We have to start to face reality. Solve the flood phenomena together, solve corruption together, solve drug trafficking together, solve human trafficking together. Rather than UTILIZING these issues to bash each other!!
Yingluck Govt Still Fails In Latest Opinion Survey
Started by webfact, 2012-02-08 14:54
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53 replies to this topic
#51Posted 2012-02-11 22:31:02 #52Posted 2012-02-12 03:10:35
Abhisit's government failed. Thailand failed. Yingluck's government fails, Thailand fails. Whats the difference? Nothing. Thailand is hopeless. Unless someone new, promising, and does it for the passion of our King and the well being of Thailand, will our country wake up and reunite to compete with the rest of the world. Politics is a thing of the past. We have to start to face reality. Solve the flood phenomena together, solve corruption together, solve drug trafficking together, solve human trafficking together. Rather than UTILIZING these issues to bash each other!! Well said. The problem is that using the parliamentary system you can not follow up on your ideas you have to continually make accommodation's to other parties or you will be gone. Look at Abhist unable to make any real progress due to having to make concessions and put down a armed coup attempt. No one will be able to make any real progress under these type of conditions. Even now Thailand has a party with the majority of seats but it was elected by the minority and must still watch it's Ps and Qs also corruption is a big block to progress. It would seem that the first thing taken into consideration when a big project is announced is how munch can be drained into private pockets. Once they get that figured out they consider starting. #53Posted 2012-02-12 09:34:26
Abhisit's government failed. Thailand failed. Yingluck's government fails, Thailand fails. Whats the difference? Nothing. Thailand is hopeless. Unless someone new, promising, and does it for the passion of our King and the well being of Thailand, will our country wake up and reunite to compete with the rest of the world. Politics is a thing of the past. We have to start to face reality. Solve the flood phenomena together, solve corruption together, solve drug trafficking together, solve human trafficking together. Rather than UTILIZING these issues to bash each other!! Well said. The problem is that using the parliamentary system you can not follow up on your ideas you have to continually make accommodation's to other parties or you will be gone. Look at Abhist unable to make any real progress due to having to make concessions and put down a armed coup attempt. No one will be able to make any real progress under these type of conditions. Even now Thailand has a party with the majority of seats but it was elected by the minority and must still watch it's Ps and Qs also corruption is a big block to progress. It would seem that the first thing taken into consideration when a big project is announced is how munch can be drained into private pockets. Once they get that figured out they consider starting. This is a very real problem in Thailand and is one of the reasons why I think PT is the best option on the table despite their questionable performance since the only really democratic option to them is an unholy alliance between the Dems and BJT which basically meant that Abhisit had to hand over control of key parts of government such as the Transport and Interior Ministries to his senior partners as well as having to buy off the smaller parties with the likes of the Agriculture and Tourism Ministries. At least the PT party has a stronger electoral mandate and the slight majority of seats in parliament to be able to push through its policies and also keep coalition partners in line since they are not vital to the governments survival. #54Posted 2012-02-12 20:37:52
I looked for other reports of this poll and did not find any except for The Nation. BU did another poll the same day with an almost identical number of people, and that poll was done in Bangkok.
http://www.mcot.net/...age/327878.html A different poll was released today that was explicitly national http://thaifinancial...flood-solution/ The BKK Pundit talks about a slightly older poll (Jan 18th), but it is interesting to see the demographic break-down. http://asiancorrespo...ence-in-either/ |
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