BANGKOK: Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra faced mounting calls to resign today after a leaked phone call she had with former Cambodian leader Hun Sen provoked widespread anger and a key coalition partner to quit.
The coalition government led by Shinawatras Pheu Thai party is on the brink of collapse, throwing the kingdom into a fresh round of political instability as it seeks to boost its spluttering economy and avoid US President Donald Trumps swingeing trade tariffs.
The conservative Bhumjaithai party, Pheu Thais biggest partner, pulled out yesterday saying Paetongtarns conduct in the leaked call had wounded the country and the armys dignity.
Losing Bhumjaithais 69 MPs leaves Paetongtarn with barely enough votes to scrape a majority in parliament, and a snap election looks a clear possibility barely two years after the last one in May 2023.
Two coalition parties, the United Thai Nation and Democrat Party, will hold urgent meetings to discuss the situation later today.
Losing either would likely mean the end of Paetongtarns government and either an election or a bid by other parties to stitch together a new coalition.
Resignation calls
The Palang Pracharath party, which led the government up to 2023 and is headed by General Prawit Wongsuwan who supported a coup against Paetongtarns aunt Yingluck called for the premier to resign.
The partys statement said the leaked recording showed Paetongtarn was weak and inexperienced, and incapable of managing the countrys security.
This already has proved that Thailand has a leader who will lead the country to a bad situation and weakness, the statement said.
Another opposition party, Thai Sang Thai, also called for Paethongtarn to step down, saying her conversation with Hun Sen had damaged the kingdoms sovereignty and the army.
In the leaked phone call, Paetongtarn is heard discussing an ongoing border dispute with Hun Sen who stepped down as Cambodian prime minister in 2023 after four decades but still wields considerable influence.
She addresses the veteran leader as uncle and refers to the Thai army commander in the countrys northeast as her opponent, a remark that sparked fierce criticism on social media, particularly on Pheu Thais page and the Royal Thai Armys page.
Thailands armed forces have long played a powerful role in the kingdoms politics, and politicians are usually careful not to antagonise them.
The kingdom has had a dozen coups since the end of absolute monarchy in 1932, and the current crisis has inevitably triggered rumours that another may be in the offing.
If she is ousted she would be the third member of her family, after her aunt Yingluck and father Thaksin Shinawatra, to be kicked out of office by the army.
Awkward coalition
Paetongtarn, 38, came to power in August 2024 at the head of an uneasy coalition between Pheu Thai and a group of conservative, pro-military parties whose members have spent much of the last 20 years battling against her father.
Growing tensions within the coalition erupted into open warfare in the past week as Pheu Thai tried to take the interior minister job away from Bhumjaithai leader Anutin Charnvirakul.
The loss of Bhumjaithai leaves Pheu Thais coalition with just a handful more votes than the 248 needed for a majority.
The battle between the conservative pro-royal establishment and Thaksins political movement has dominated Thai politics for more than 20 years.
Former Manchester City owner Thaksin, 75, still enjoys huge support from the rural base whose lives he transformed with populist policies in the early 2000s.
But he is despised by Thailands powerful elites, who saw his rule as corrupt, authoritarian and socially destabilising.
Thaksin returned to Thailand in 2023 as Pheu Thai took power after 15 years in self-exile overseas.
The current Pheu Thai-led government has already lost one prime minister, former businessman Srettha Thavisin, who was kicked out by a court order last year, bringing Paetongtarn to office.