Jacob Shapiro: All right, Phil. I've personally been waiting a long time for this moment to have you on the podcast. It's it's really nice to run it back. We're on a mission from God and the team is at least partly back together. We've gathered today to discuss the Thai elections in part because, and I will admit to the listeners, I am a relative novice when it comes to this, and Phil, although you have not been sort of in the, in the flow of, of Thailand's day-to-day politics for, I don't know, how long has it been?
Eight to 12 months. You've kind of been out, you have forgotten more about Thai politics than I will ever be able to learn in the next. Couple of years. So I'm gracious, I'm, I'm grateful for you coming on and lending your perspective and helping us make sense of what's going on. I guess we can sort of recap the results.
So I think everybody was distracted, rightfully so, by Turkish elections. I described them as the most important elections happening this year. But the Turkish elections really, you know, everybody thought that there was gonna be a vote for change and there wasn't really a vote for change. It was a vote for Erdogan and for continuity and sort of the same old thing.
Thailand had elections the same day. And my take on this has been this. Was actually a real vote for change. But also the kicker there is that Thai, the Thai people have been trying to vote for change for, I don't know, decades, and the military keeps coming in and putting their foot on the scales. Most recently, there was the coup in 2014.
Afterwards they create this 250 person Senate that. They have to sign off on whoever gets named Prime Minister. So even when you have a scenario right now where Thai Opposition party is led by the move forward party and the it's leader, his name is Peter. How do I, how do I, do you know how to pronounce that name?
Phil Peta Lija. I, I can't do it. I even, I was on YouTube like for minutes beforehand trying to figure it out.
Phillip Orchard: I do. But I'm just gonna let you
Jacob Shapiro: dangle. Great. Okay. I think I see Peter and I'm like in the Hunger Games, but anyway, thank you for letting me dangle. But anyway, he's got 36% of the votes.
He's already forged this coalition that has more than 50% in the House of Representatives needed, but he doesn't have a. Enough to counter the 250 person military Senate. And I saw one report that said 12 senators said that they would vote for the opposition, but that's not gonna quite cut it. He's gotta come up with 60 to 70 more votes.
And that's a lot to ask in a democracy for, for an opposition, even if it's really widely supported, to come in and get like a two thirds or even three quarters majority. So, That's kind of where we are. Tell me where I'm wrong about that stuff or, or where you think we should be focused as we try and understand the importance of these elections and what happens next.
Phillip Orchard: Yeah, I mean well, you're not wrong. I mean, he's not for a, a big vote for change in a system that is very, was designed intentionally to to resist it. And that's often what you'll see. You know, authoritarian governments do after some sort of coup is returned to quote unquote democracy, but try to stack the system in a way that that, you know, addresses some of their their concerns, we'll say, and preserves the power of the establishment.
In Thailand, they've always, the ruling elite have always been suspicious of, you know, full on democracy. They're. Their suspicions in their minds were validated overwhelmingly by toxins watras aggressive version of, of democracy and success at, at at using the, the quote unquote will of the people to amass enormous power and threaten every old institution in the country.
Again, in their minds. So, yeah, this is, but it is still a, I mean, so it's, it's a huge deal though in the sense that it reflects, I think a, a big paradigm shift that occurred a couple years ago. And that's sort of, Fits neatly within the broader sweep of Thai history especially recent, you know, past two or three decades history about Thai political dynamics and the landscape of power in the country.
Jacob Shapiro: Yeah, I mean, so in the last, I guess I struggle here with whether this is also gonna be different than the last election because in the last election, the opposition also won a majority of. Of seats in the House of Representatives, not as quite a big, a majority as this one, but still a majority. And that military appointed Senate came in and put their, their foot on the scale.
And so you got Ute Cha. See, I, I think I can pronounce that one, who is just, he's the incumbent now and he's. Been there and he's sort of the military's chosen leader. And you know, Thai politics didn't collapse companies didn't relocate their supply chains away from Thailand. Like maybe there were some protests in Bangkok, but it didn't actually meaningfully change anything.
And people just kind of went along with the system. And I guess like the million, the million bought question here, or the 10 trillion bot question here is gonna be if the military does this again, if that senate. You know, puts its foot on the scale and says, no Che's gonna have another run at this here.
Or even we're gonna block Pita from. From being the Prime Minister. I mean, is it just gonna be protests and then it's gonna go away? Is it gonna be, is it gonna actually morph into broader societal unrest that forces changes in the Thai monarchy, in the Thai political system? I mean, h how do you that the last time this happened, nothing actually changed, right?
So why should we expect anything to change this time? Or should we.
Phillip Orchard: Yeah, no, that's a good question. That I don't know. But, so, but I think it's worth looking at this in sort of the broader sense of what's, of what has changed sort of out outside of the top line electoral results. Results and just in the landscape of power in general.
So I mean, if, if you think about, just if you indulge me for some Thai history basically, Yeah, so there's the, the longtime Ramen nine, the beloved king. You see him everywhere in Bangkok, the God king. He was a force for stability portrayed as being above politics and everything. Really what, what that was, was an era of.
Pretty dominant military, political elite with him sort of as not just a figurehead. He had power, but he was very subtle in the way he used it. And it was mostly, you know, there's a lot of symbolic power if, I don't know if you've seen the crown season one, when the queen is learning that like actually you really can't intervene all that often.
Yeah. You know, so that's, if you, you have power, but if you use it, you might lose it. Cuz if they reject you then then you might. Then, then they expose you as being an emperor with no clothes. All right. So the, the Cold War era, basically that was fairly stable, you know, of limited democracy and so forth.
Around the eighties times start, Thailand starts to get really rich, or not really rich, but there starts, you know, it goes through the manufacturing boom and, and the, all, everything else that came along with globalization and I started to stress. Some of the, the cohesion in the country, there's a lot of, you know, dis displacement of communities news sources of power, you know, and so forth.
Long comes toxins, shinawatra, and, and along this time you start naturally getting a, a push toward more liberal democracy, right? Culminating of the 1997 constitution toxin, Suna comes along. He's a guy. He was from the north but had made all the right moves, all the right connections to sort of, to take advantage of the, the wave of privatization in the country and becomes a billionaire and for the first time.
And, but he's, he's his genius politically was. In addition to just having a lot of money was he was able to unify the outside, the political, the very fr fractured political landscape outside of Bangkok. Right. You think sort of a, who was that guy in game of Thrones? The who? United. The tribes north of the Wall.
I don't remember his name. John Stan. Yeah, but nah,
Jacob Shapiro: him the other one. Oh man Raider. There you go. Oh,
Phillip Orchard: there you go. Yeah. Nice. It was sort of like that he unified, unified, the, the rural peoples, the rural communities and so forth. And that made him. Between the politics, between the money, between the, I mean, he made him an unassailable political force.
His parties have won basically every, every election that Thailand's had until this one. That really threatened the establishment along that time. At same time, the king is starting to age the new, the prince at the time, the crown prince, now the current king. He was proving himself in public to be an embarrassment in all these different ways, or if not an embarrassment, at least he was, it was clear he was not gonna be able to have his father's esteem and everything.
And so there really for the next 20 years. It was with, especially with the, the king's power stabilizing influence, receding, it was toxin versus the sort of royalist elite quote unquote royalist. Meaning that though, basically everyone calls, everyone tries to take advantage of the monarchy and prove that the monarchy is on their side and so forth.
Mm-hmm. But the, just for over, for simplification sake, it was toxin and the rural peoples versus the military elites and their, and the, the elites of Thai society in business and so forth going at it. And those, the, and those, that period of disruption got real violent never quite like spilled over into fall, you know, all out civil war in the way that.
Most of Thailand's neighbors have, and I think that speaks to a lot of different subtle things about Thai culture and the king and everything else. It's there. There was this pattern of elections and there's the 2006 coup. Then they held elections in ti toxins. One of his lackeys won. This is right before my wife and I moved there the first time.
This guy, he was a big gregarious personality. He was really funny. Name's TA mock. They disqualified to him for something to do with a cooking show he had. So then they have a, they have another not election, but they have another. Parliamentary vote and Toxin's brother-in-law gets installed as Prime Minister and that, and that's led to violent protests that we had some experience getting mixed up in tell that story.
And he lasted about a month and then they finally, they were able, able to disqualify enough candidates to get and, you know, to form a government with that was backed by the, the Bangkok Elite. Right. The toxin in his quote unquote Redshirts, did not like that. And back to the man's radar analogy for the next two years, they actively invaded Bangkok, basically culminating in 2010 with, with these mass long-term protests where they took over the Mooni Park in the middle, in the middle of the city.
Built a giant bamboo wall around this giant park. Basically a central park, right? Like an actual bamboo fortress. We're lobbying, you know, and lobby, you know, they had some, the thing about the military and security forces, like there tend to be pretty fractured as well. So there's always gonna be some military fact disaffected, military faction that will, or two that we'll be willing to, you know, join your, your political movement.
So they're, you know, lobbying grenades from behind this bamboo wall just randomly into the city. That led to this massive showdown in 2010. I mean, it wasn't civil war, but it was, it was basically, you know, running battles in the streets of Bangkok leading to the largest shopping mall in Asia, getting torched.
Saw it from an airplane. It was, it was a really sad day. Point being is like, it was really this, almost it, the Thai landscape of power has always been this delicate balance between the monarchy and the military and the, you know, business elites and this and that and this and that. But it really, for that era, it became this all out zero sum game between toxin and his for and his people versus the.
The military leads as embodied by this faction that led the 2006 and 2014 COOs. Yeah, so back back and forth. They, they finally hold another election. Toxin sister wins ing luck. She lasts for a while. Augustine meet Obama and so forth. But then she gets asked in 2014 by the coup led by pr and and so it's been this like talk, like toxin just struck so much fear into the hearts of all of Thailand's old guard and And it, it really was, that was the dominant dynamic.
The, there's a paradigm, Thai poli or protest culture. There's a, even in like small towns, like there's a, the this, you're expected to go for broke, basically, like you. There it's not, you don't show up and then, you know, pick it for a while and then go home. You, like, you, you, you show up. You stand there until whatever you're upset about, whether it's a, some deadbeat business owner or the provincial director of the local, you know, provincial government or whatever.
You, you show up, you stand there until they give you something and everyone saves a little bit of face and goes home. If you don't give them something, then things tend to like explode. And so that's what kept happening with, with tox in the, in the, in the royalists. Meanwhile, the king is kind of withering away, receding from the scene.
In 2008. He, you know, When we, right when we got there was the yellow shirts were trying to ous toxins brother-in-law at that point. And, you know, they're all, they were all marching around in Bangkok holding pictures of the king and the, you know, basically trying to like facilitate, bring about a military coup.
The king told them to, you know, password that he was disapproved, he wanted them to go home, you know, and, and everything. And they, they ignored him. They kept marching, holding pictures of the king and the, at that point, he just basically quit and said, All right, I'm out. I have no more influence. I'm going to the coast.
And no, that's kind of end of it. And so he really receded from this, the scene and that kind of accelerated or just pour gasoline on, on everything. But since the coup. The 2014 coup, you know, it was, it was basically stable. And I'm not by no means endorsing, you know, authoritarian governments or anything like that, but this, the second time we lived there we lived there for about six years total into two stints.
It was remarkable. I mean, it's just how politics kind of receded from most people's minds. There just weren't politics that the. The military held power, they passed it to themselves when they had a, a nominal transition to civilian government. When the king died, they used finally died in 2016 or 17.
They used that as pretext to just shut everything down for another couple years. And then And over that time they were able to, to gear, you know, re rejigger the system in that very much in their favor. So that when eventually they did return to elections, you know, they could at least limit the power of any particular.
Populous figure like the next toxin. So long story short, it was a zero something
followed by a period of unsatisfactory, but kind of relief relieving stability. And then all of a sudden this third, fourth shows up in the but yeah, but it didn't really solve any of Thailand's underlying, underlying questions of, about the king, about this unsettled power structure. Right.
And that's what the growth of this third movement, the student, the youth student led protest that we started to see in 2019. I think in with the current king, mostly hanging out in Germany, not really carrying all that much. That's where we are now. And so it, it is, even if nothing has changed on the in terms of who holds all the power or even if it's Thailand's future is as uncertain as ever.
It's a different, it's a different landscape now. Fundamentally different than it was a few years ago. And that's even with toxin's daughter finishing first, or his party putta led by his daughter finishing fir or second in these elections and, and. Basically playing kingmaker with the the coalition role.
I mean, so toxin's still very much in the game. It's just, it's just not this yeah. Two-sided, zero something
Jacob Shapiro: anymore. It's really striking that, so, so PETA is what, he's 42 years old. He has a. He has degrees from, you know, the JFK school. He's got a, he's got a master public policy from JFK and an M B A from the Sloan School of Management at M I T.
You've already talked about Chino Watcher's daughter, who, you know, he's still in self-imposed exile, doing whatever he's doing, but she's running. But when you look at her background too, I mean, she's got. She's got a degree in international hotel management from the University of Sury. Like we're talking about very young people educated outside of Thailand for the formative years of their life, going against a defense minister or former defense minister.
Turn Prime Minister Kuster, who, I mean, just look at his picture. He, he looks like, he looks like an old dude. You know, he doesn't look like he's, he's certainly not an agent of change, so it's, I don't know. You would think that in a country that. Has relatively older demographics. It's interesting that these two young guns are out there in the front and are getting such a large percentage of the vote.
And it was, it was also a lot of turnout. It was something like 70, 75% turnout in the vote too. I mean, can you imagine what US election results we would get if we had 75% turnout in this country? It would absolutely change things. So there's passion out there too, but I don't really know how to read.
You know, what exactly the opposition here is standing for? Is it do, do they have some kind of thing that they're for? Is it pro business? Is it just anti monarchy? Is it just change? Like what, what is it that, that they represent that you think the, that Thai people were voting for? I.
Phillip Orchard: Yeah. So first of all, for the puti toxin slaughter, I, I, I, I, she doesn't really command an independent political base.
The reason why toxin always elevates family members to, to the top un. Like, you know, when Ying luck was Prime Minister, she was a political, novice, same thing now with his daughter she is a front poor toxin himself. He's in Dubai, can't be there to participate directly. So that's, that's what he does to try to, you know, He'll ne he'll never quit.
He, he, I thought maybe this time he had quit, but no, no toxin does not quit. And he still commands an enormous amount of loyalty especially in rural provinces. But, but you're, I think you're exactly right with with pizza and, and The move forward movement. Yeah. What do they stand for?
That is a good question, and it's, so is when the 2019, when the student protest started, and it was fundamentally different than as I was getting at, like, than the toxin led protests. Right. It wasn't, it was never this go for broke showdown that resulted in running gun battles in the streets and so forth.
It was very leaderless in the, in the way that student protests movements often are, which makes them difficult to negotiate with, difficult to identify the direction, but also a little bit easier maybe, perhaps to wade out, I guess, a little bit less threatening in the big scene. I mean, talk, talk to him.
As I mentioned, he was a, he was a threat to the establishment. I don't know if they really ever saw. The sing led protests, but they did, we were able to translate that into electoral success with with to Torrance's victory and now this one. And yes, it, and it's fascinating that, so that was one, yeah, one interesting thing.
It was just completely different than what was going on before, but it was super interesting that they were very explicitly. Opposed to the monarchy. That was a huge thing that, and that was a long standing fear with the, the crown prince. Now the king was what happens when this guy who has a lot of power but can't use it, but has a ton of prestige and is a stabilizing force, maybe, but maybe not, you know what happens when he's gone and what happens when the conference takes over?
The, the longest time fear for the Royalist elite was that he would side with. Side with toxin, and then that would, and there was, and there was hindsight. He was trying to early on, but that has not come to pass. I think he's generally happy, but back, yeah. Back to the, the students and the B because the thing is, like, as I mentioned earlier, e everybody has always just tried to, to take advantage, use the monarchy for their own gains, right?
If you have a explicit seal of approval or, or a. Or an implicit one. You know, they, that can go a long way. And, and, and given how, especially the elites stoke fear and motivate political support by invoking. The monarchy and by evoking, by turning it by framing things as well. Toxin and his people want to get rid of the monarchy.
And we are, we the true Thai people, the true you know, guardians of Thai culture and, and virtue and all these things. We wanna protect the monarchy. Just, you know, it's the same story that you see it play elsewhere, play out elsewhere in, in different ways with religion or whatever. So the fact that they were deliberately po starting a fight over this was super interesting and it suggests that there's a lot of real, real frustrated frustration on the ground.
Not nec. I don't think it's, I think it's less about the king himself and more just the royalist establishment and like the way that especially PreK was and his government, you know, they were using the Les laws to crack down on, you know, it just about anything. You know, it had even stuff that had nothing to do with the monarchy, including with to thorns when they were going after him after the 2019 elections.
You know, I think he was, He was critical of praise, he was handling of covid and they slapped him with a less measure they had charged. So that's the just general frustration, youth frustration with the sclerotic self-serving you know, self enriching elites. I, I think that's what it's more about then the actual, you know, if, so if the king's hang, you know, hanging out with the harem in Germany all the time and ne neglecting the ty, I don't think actually that many people care about it.
But it's not something, I mean, maybe they find it distasteful or embarrassing, but it's not something that's going to, you're gonna build a political movement on. I think it's much more about the broader upheaval and frustration that you, that that you see all over the world. And it, that got magnified a lot during, during Covid.
Jacob Shapiro: Yeah. Well I'll get you outta here on this. You know, this has been a lot of inside baseball to a certain extent. But you know, we ostensibly think about this from a geopolitical perspective. Does this matter for the region? Is this really just, you know, for geeks about who wanna know about Thailand?
It's, it's an interesting thing that's happening in a country that is relatively isolated. Or, or are there ramifications here for the region? Based on which, which direction? Thai politics goes.
Phillip Orchard: Yeah, that, you know, so that, that was, as someone who loved Thailand and was obsessed with Thailand, who lived in Thailand and just wanted to read and write about Thailand.
I was always struggling to make the case for why it ever mattered on like a broader scene. It's, you know, compared in the, in the, like, given it's placed in the regional landscape is in, at least in terms of like China's potential counterweights or chest. You know, ponds on the chess board in the big US China geopolitical game or whatever.
Yeah, Thailand's kind of like hanging out on the side. It certainly matters. It has a very strategically important geography. It's a economic super important economic anchor for the reason it's got a lot of influence with this neighbors, all these things. But it's not the, it's not the Philippines, right?
It's not, you know, directly on the front lines. It's not Vietnam. It's not. Me and Marla's just falling apart. Thailand. Thailand, I mean, for all its problems, it definitely, I think the problems keep it from playing a bigger role in being, throwing, being able to throw its, its weight around more directly, but I don't, you know, just by occasionally scaring off investors and whatever.
But Thailand's also super resilient. They always bounce back from this stuff. It, in a lot of countries, like, you know, 2010, that could have sparked a, you know, just total chaos for years and years and years. And then, you know, it was like they're cleaning it up by the next day. Tyler, Tyler moves on.
They have, you know, they. They, China has a ton of influence there, but they, so does Japan. So does the US sodas Singapore, Taiwan you know, Thailand. They just kind of go along, get along and and and yeah. And you know, they're the big, the Thai mentality is sababa, which is you know, very happy-go-lucky like no worries.
And it really does like permeate like their. Even like their geo geopolitical posture in a lot of ways.
Jacob Shapiro: Well, you know, it doesn't sound like the re it doesn't sound like the results here, whether the opposition actually gets a Prime Minister or whether it's Ccha or some other military representative.
It doesn't sound like that's gonna change Thailand's general posture, which is basically to play all sides in the region. Am I right about saying that?
Phillip Orchard: You're right. Yeah, I think so. In general It, you know, even if someone came in and really wanted to steer the country in one particular direction, it would be difficult too, because it's just not a country that lends itself to being steered in a very concrete direction.
And, and, and it doesn't really make sense for Thailand to strongly pick a side. I mean, it, it's, it's leery of China's being bullied around by China just like everyone else in the region. It's certainly not, doesn't, not particularly up for a fight, you know, pushing back. But, you know, they're very good at sort of you know, Thailand.
Thailand, proudly, proudly, proudly is one of the few countries in the world that was never colonized. And they, they know the very, they have a long history of deafly playing different sides off each other and, and sort of smiling. And saying, yes, we'll do that, and then not doing it or, or just doing something else.
And so you know, they're, they're good at this game and and they'll probably, yeah, they'll probably benefit from it. In most
Jacob Shapiro: ways, yeah. Seems to me like from an like from an investment perspective for if I'm a corporate that's thinking about supply chains like all the other countries in the, like it seems to me like Thailand has a lot like the best of all worlds.
Like yes, it has problems, but it has relative stability, it has resilience, it has access to both the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. I mean, Vietnam. Has tons of problems and the Vietnamese Communist Party is doing all these purges and like, that's a whole other thing. The Philippines is, as you said, is on the front lines.
Taiwan, who knows what Taiwan's future is really gonna be when you start to look at the countries in the region. You know, Thailand's, at least to me, it like relative to the other countries around it. Even with all the things that we're talking about with its instability, it seems like. One of the best bets in the region, if you're just thinking about relative stability or ability to do business or your ability to, for companies there to do well am am I, am I a little too naively sanguine?
Phillip Orchard: So, yeah, I, I, I, I, I think it's problems tend show up more on a Yeah. Micro level. It, in terms of, it's very difficult to, if they, if they, if it's always, you know, wrought with political and stability and changes, frequent changes, the government and that kind of, it, it does make it difficult for the country, which is to invest in infrastructure.
Take advantage of its, you know, position as a regional hub to have policy continuity. You know, Thailand's pretty famously, you know, has a lot of institutionalized corruption and, and and so forth. And yeah, just on a practical matter, it's hard to know like who, where the money's supposed to go and that kind of thing.
So it, it certainly, if it certainly keeps Thailand from being more than the sum of its parts, I think it limits its potential. But it is got a pretty high floor too, if that makes sense. You know, it's, I, I I would be, it's hard to see it becoming, It doesn't have the, we're gonna put this in NBA terms.
Indonesia is Zion Williams, Zion Williamson, and and Thailand is you know, a good three and D Wing Thailand is Jabar Smith. Kind of, it'll frustrate you, but it's you know, it'll solid. It's solid. It'll show up. It'll, it's steady. It'll, it'll at least play games.
Jacob Shapiro: It won't, it won't pull its hamstring trying to do something that no other human in the world could ever consider doing.
Yeah. And at least you'll get some three and d. Alright, Phil, we're
Phillip Orchard: indonesia's. Yeah, it's a hamstring pop waiting to happen every, every time it steps on the corner.
Jacob Shapiro: Well, Phil, thank you for coming on and talking to us. If anything crazy happens with Thai elections, I'll ho I, I hope you'll come back on and whether.
If we have new developments about the Iran nuclear deal or if my hobby horse for my Strat four days, Tunisia enters the news, you can come back on and we can delve into Tunisia and I can, I can be just as geeky about something that probably doesn't matter geopolitically in general, but you ask about that too.
So cheers, dude. It's good to see you. Likewise.
Phillip Orchard: Thanks Jacob.
Jacob Shapiro: Thank you so much for listening to the Cognitive Dissidents Podcast, brought to you by Cognitive Investments. If you are interested in learning more about cognitive investments, you can check us out online@cognitive.investments. That's cognitive.investments.
You can also write to me directly if you want. At Jacob cognitive.investments. Cheers and we'll see you out there. The views expressed in this commentary are subject to change based on market and other conditions. This podcast may contain certain statements that may be deemed forward-looking statements.
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