
"Thai Sang Thai" declares the goal to "build honest politics" by purging corrupt individuals, emphasizing three measures to ensure corrupt people no longer have a place in Thai society.
On 5 Dec 2025 GMT+7, Khunying Sudarat Keyuraphan, leader of the Thai Sang Thai Party, launched the major campaign "Big Cleaning Thailand: Time to Purge Corrupt Officials." She stated that "building honest politics" is the main mission to transform the country, drawing inspiration from King Rama IX’s teachings on promoting good people to govern the nation, and declared the resolve that "corrupt individuals must no longer have a place in Thai society."
Khunying Sudarat pointed out that deeply rooted corruption severely damages the economy, causing the country's growth to fall below 2% and pushing household debt to 16 trillion baht, nearly equal to the nation's GDP. She also noted that corruption is linked to modern crimes such as call center gangs, scammers, and extortion systems, signaling that the country risks becoming a "failed state" if the power structures allowing dark capital to dominate are not urgently reformed.
Under this campaign, Khunying Sudarat said the party plans to push three decisive anti-corruption measures: increasing the maximum penalty to the death sentence for corrupt officials and politicians; empowering citizens to gather 50,000 signatures to recall independent organizations and the Constitutional Court if they are found to benefit corrupt individuals; and establishing a People's National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) to genuinely investigate and prosecute state corruption projects. She invited the public to rise up and fight, refusing to tolerate wrongdoing, to lead Thailand beyond the black hole of corruption sustainably.