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BJT win bodes well for conservatives

Bangkok Post

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February 11, 2026

Party’s decisive election victory buoyed by rising nationalism, ‘ban yai’ clans, write Aekarach Sattaburuth and Mongkol Bangprapa

- Aekarach Sattaburuth and Mongkol Bangprapa

he outcome of Thailand’s latest general election has prompted intense debate among political analysts, with many concluding that the decisive victory of the Bhumjaithai Party (BJT) represents a triumph of the conservative camp reinforced by rising nationalist sentiment and the strategic consolidation of local political power bases, or ban yai (influential political clans).

While the win was commanding, scholars caution that it is neither permanent nor immune to future shocks.

Olarn Thinbangtieo, a lecturer at the Faculty of Political Science and Law at Burapha University, said the election should be read as a victory for conservative forces, but one that remains fragile. He warned against complacency, arguing that the result amounts to a “strategic electoral victory” aimed at securing short-term dominance rather than long-term ideological stability.

“The central task for the BJT now is to lay a solid foundation for the conservative camp; Mr Olarn said. “That means working seriously on ideas, policy frameworks, and institutional grounding, especially now the party has been credited as the spearhead of conservative politics”

According to Mr Olarn, one key factor shaping voter behaviour was the late-campaign collapse of momentum around Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva, which he described as abrupt and difficult to rationalise. Faced with this uncertainty, voters — particularly in Bangkok — made strategic decisions. Many split their ballots, supporting the Democrats on the party-list vote while backing constituency candidates from other parties, recognising that Democrats had little chance of winning district races in the capital.

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