2008_Bangkok_gubernatorial_election

2008 Bangkok gubernatorial election

2008 Bangkok gubernatorial election

Eighth gubernatorial election for the city of Bangkok, Thailand


The eighth gubernatorial election for the city of Bangkok, Thailand, was held on 5 October 2008. The election was won by the incumbent Governor Apirak Kosayothin, placing him in his second consecutive four-year term in office, winning 45.93 percent of the vote. Of a total of 4,087,329 eligible voters, 2,214,320 voted, giving a turnout rate of 54.18 percent, lower than the 70 percent target expected by the Election Committee.

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Sixteen candidates contested the election. Apirak, candidate for the opposition Democrat Party, was seen as the favourite. Other candidates included Chuwit Kamolvisit, a former massage parlour businessman who also ran in the 2004 election, Prapas Chongsa-nguan, former governor of the Mass Rapid Transit Authority of Thailand and candidate for the People's Power Party, Kriengsak Chareonwongsak, an academic and professor in business administration, and Leena Jangjanja, a businesswoman and lawyer who ran in the previous election and the 2006 senate election.

The sixth elected governor of Bangkok, Apirak is the second to be elected to a second term, after Chamlong Srimuang, governor from 1985–1992, who was incidentally arrested at a polling station early on the election day, on charges of insurrection due to his role as leader of the People's Alliance for Democracy, a group which has staged protests and occupied Government House since August.[1]

Campaign

Apirak's four-year term as governor ended on 28 August 2008. Applications for the post were accepted from 1 to 5 September, and the official list of candidates was announced on 11 September. Campaigning included public speeches by candidates, television interviews, campaign trucks announcing messages through loudspeakers, and most noticeably, a multitude of campaign posters erected on the pavements, some of which fell over and injured pedestrians and motorcyclists.[2]

The more unusual campaigning stunts included Leena's bathing in a canal to reflect the local population's experiences, which ended tragically when her campaign manager drowned.[3] Nearer to the election day, Chuwit caused headline news by punching and kicking a television journalist after an interview.[4]

Chuwit also filed complaints against Apirak, claiming that the appearance of Apirak's name on the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration's election publicity posters violated electoral law.[5] The case was accepted by the Bangkok Election Committee, but a final ruling by the Election Commission would not be heard until after the election.

Results

Polling was organised by the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration under the supervision of the Bangkok Election Commission, with a total budget of over 154 million baht. Voting took place from 08:00 to 15:00 on 5 October at 6,337 polling stations across the fifty districts of the city.[6]

Exit polls by Assumption and Suan Dusit Rajabhat Universities indicated that Apirak had won 44 to 52 percent of the vote by the time the polling stations closed.[7] The unofficial results, to be submitted to the Election Commission for approval, were announced by the Bangkok City Clerk on midnight.[8]

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References

  1. AFP 2008.
  2. Head 2008.
  3. Sinlapalavan & Kongdejsakda 2008.
  4. Wong-Anan 2008.
  5. Wancharoen & Glahan 2008.
  6. BMA 2008a
  7. TNA 2008.
  8. Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA). (2008). "รายงานความคืบหน้านับคะเเนนผู้สมัครการเลือกตั้งผู้ว่าราชาการกรุงเทพมหานคร ปี 2551" [Progress report of vote counting for candidates in the Bangkok governor's election 2008]. (PDF) (in Thai). http://office2.bangkok.go.th/ard/wp-content/uploads/election/3.8.pdf Archived 2021-12-31 at the Wayback Machine
  • AFP (5 October 2008), Thai police arrest second anti-govt protest leader, AFP, archived from the original on 2012-09-26, retrieved 2008-10-05.
  • Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (September 2008), กทม.ใช้งบจัดเลือกตั้ง 154 ล้าน, Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, archived from the original on 2011-07-18, retrieved 2008-10-07.
  • Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (5 October 2008), ผลการเลือกตั้งผู้ว่าราชการกรุงเทพมหานคร 5 ต.ค. 51 (อย่างไม่เป็นทางการ) ณ เวลา 23.31 น., Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, archived from the original on 2008-10-07, retrieved 2008-10-05{{citation}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). (Archived by WebCite at). (in Thai).
  • Bangkok Post (6 October 2008), Sweeping victory for Apirak in city poll, Bangkok Post, retrieved 2008-10-06. (Archived by WebCite at https://www.webcitation.org/5bNBiRBDV).
  • Head, Jonathan (5 October 2008), Bangkok set for mayoral elections, BBC News, retrieved 2008-10-06.
  • Sinlapalavan, Budsarakham; Kongdejsakda, Kornwika (26 September 2008), Catastrophe!, The Nation, archived from the original on 17 June 2009, retrieved 7 October 2008.
  • Thai News Agency (5 October 2008), Exit Polls: Former Bangkok governor Apirak re-elected, Thai News Agency, archived from the original on 2011-10-02, retrieved 2008-10-06.
  • Wancharoen, Supoj; Glahan, Surasak (2 October 2008), Apirak faces allegations of unfair campaigning, Bangkok Post, retrieved 2008-10-06. (Archived by WebCite at https://www.webcitation.org/5bNKZxGCf).
  • Wong-Anan, Nopporn (2 October 2008), Bangkok governor hopeful punches TV host, Reuters, retrieved 2008-10-07.

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