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Thai party rallies behind Somchai | Thai party rallies behind Somchai |
(40 minutes later) | |
The ruling party in Thailand has agreed to unite around a single candidate to be the new prime minister. | The ruling party in Thailand has agreed to unite around a single candidate to be the new prime minister. |
All factions in the People Power Party now say they will support Somchai Wongsawat, brother-in-law of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. | All factions in the People Power Party now say they will support Somchai Wongsawat, brother-in-law of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. |
A rebel faction within the party had threatened not to support the nomination, saying it would only prolong the country's political crisis. | A rebel faction within the party had threatened not to support the nomination, saying it would only prolong the country's political crisis. |
Mr Somchai must be approved by parliament in a vote on Wednesday. | Mr Somchai must be approved by parliament in a vote on Wednesday. |
But the party says it is confident it will win sufficient votes. | But the party says it is confident it will win sufficient votes. |
The agreement capped a day of intense political bargaining, with the threat of the party having to call a snap election if the deal-making failed. | |
The BBC's Jonathan Head in Bangkok says major factions within the PPP have been demanding cabinet posts in a future government in return for their support of Mr Somchai. | |
At the same time, prosecutors issued a second arrest warrant against Mr Thaksin, now in exile in the UK. | |
Reconciliation | |
Party spokesman Kuthep Saikrajang said on Tuesday that a faction of 73 lawmakers dropped their objection to backing Mr Somchai, who became acting prime minister last week after a court forced Samak Sundaravej to step down.Protesters remain camped out at the government complex | |
One of the dissidents, Suthin Klangsang, said at a news conference that the breakaway group accepted the party's choice "after a discussion of the party and after listening to Mr Somchai". | |
Correspondents say that the apparent conclusion of haggling for cabinet positions makes the election of Mr Somchai at Wednesday's special session of parliament highly likely. | |
"Tomorrow, all 73 MPs in our group will vote for Mr Somchai as the new prime minister," Supachai Poesu, a spokesman for the faction, told reporters after a party meeting. | |
Mr Somchai is married to a sister of Mr Thaksin and so provided a target for renewed opposition from inside and outside the government. | |
Protesters occupying the main Government House in Bangkok are demanding a change of government, arguing the present one is merely a proxy for Mr Thaksin. | |
Arrest warrant | |
The Supreme Court issued a second arrest warrant for Mr Thaksin on Tuesday after he failed to appear at the start of a trial investigating soft government loans to the military regime in neighbouring Burma while he was in office. | |
Another warrant was issued against him and his wife, Pojaman, when they failed to return from Beijing last month for a separate corruption trial. | |
Mr Thaksin faces charges of conflict of interest and abuse of power for approving a 2004 low-interest loan to Burma in exchange for satellite services and equipment orders from the Shin Satellite company, then owned by his family. | |
The four billion baht (currently the equivalent of US$127m) loan was issued by the state-controlled Export-Import Bank of Thailand. | |
The case has been suspended until Mr Thaksin can be presented in court. |
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