
Chuwit analyzes that in this election, the Orange Party is being abandoned due to weak political strategy and advises that political isolation is not a path to effectively working for the country.
On 23 December 2025 GMT+7, Mr. Chuwit Kamolvisit, a former politician, posted a message on his Facebook page, Chuwit Kamolvisit, stating:
The Orange Party is being abandoned. Polls show many voters remain undecided, so each party's information operations must work harder. The Blue Party is the biggest beneficiary of this election, thanks to the Orange Party’s "weak political strategy," which handed a perfect opportunity to the Blue Party. The Thai-Cambodia conflict further intensifies the Blue Party's momentum, propelling it from a medium-sized party to the largest party in a short span of just two months.
Mr. Chuwit stated that while the Orange Party thought it was controlling the game during the MOA, it actually allowed the Blue Party to take control. Moreover, the political game left no extension for “political novices” like the Orange Party to regroup. The Blue Party launched an offensive by uniting major factions and opening negotiations to form a government after the election, while the Orange Party was abandoned and isolated after suffering a major political betrayal. The Blue Party closed ranks, making it clear from the start: “With Blue, no Orange,” framing the choice for voters as only between Blue or Orange.
Mr. Chuwit noted that political isolation is not a way to serve the country effectively, as politics is about cooperation among parties in a Thai style—not the two-party systems of the U.S. or the U.K. This isolation has caused the Orange Party to be abandoned both by other parties and by the public. Polls consistently show more than 40% of voters remain undecided. Yet the Orange Party stubbornly clings to past overwhelming election results and is deluded by them.
He added that nothing lasts forever in Thai politics, especially for the Orange Party, which has been repeatedly deceived. The Thai people have sent a clear message to the Orange Party: many voters who are wary and inexperienced, but won parliamentary seats purely on momentum, do not learn from political experience and will be deceived again if chosen. They therefore prefer not to vote. The blunt but painful truth is the Orange Party’s lack of political savvy. As a former supporter, I feel this, and it will affect other supporters who voted for the Orange Party last time. It is unsurprising that in the next election, the Orange Party will be widely abandoned.