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Thai Sang Thai Party Declares No Corruption Means Funds for Public Care, Emphasizes Thai People Relieved Campaign

Politic05 Jan 2026 16:02 GMT+7

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Thai Sang Thai Party Declares No Corruption Means Funds for Public Care, Emphasizes Thai People Relieved Campaign

The Thai Sang Thai Party declared that simply not engaging in corruption would free funds to care for the public. Khunying Sudarat emphasized the "Thai People Relieved" campaign, pledging to care for people from the prenatal stage through old age. She requested a chance for Thai Sang Thai to break the nation's corruption cycle and dismantle the entrenched "big house" political mindset.

On 5 Jan 2026 GMT+7, Khunying Sudarat Keyuraphan, leader of the Thai Sang Thai Party, led the party's prime ministerial candidates to announce the "Thai People Relieved" campaign. It focuses on reforming the management of the nearly 4 trillion baht national budget. She pointed out that stopping corruption, which leaks over 500 billion baht annually, would leave the country with vast funds to build policies ensuring Thai people’s security, dignity, and honor without increasing debt burdens on future generations. The key is "sincere budget allocation"—redirecting taxpayers' money to improve quality of life rather than enriching politicians through theft.

The party promotes comprehensive care policies for Thai people "from the womb to old age" to address demographic and economic challenges, with GDP growth below 2%. This includes prenatal care, free education up to a bachelor's degree to ease parental burdens, and health support for the elderly to maintain strength and income, preventing retirement from becoming a family burden. They also plan to unlock laws hindering livelihoods and provide capital access for small entrepreneurs. All this is grounded in the proven clean governance and successful experience of their three candidates, who have demonstrated "no corruption, experience, and effective work."

Khunying Sudarat urged the public to change their mindset and stop supporting "big house" parties that spend hundreds of millions per district on vote-buying, as those politicians inevitably recoup their investments through corruption. Thai Sang Thai seeks the opportunity to end the nation’s corruption cycle and is ready to submit 50,000 citizen signatures to impeach corrupt politicians and independent organizations. This aims to prove that "democracy for the people"—one that benefits them directly and grants genuine rights—does exist. She expressed confidence that honest professionals can lead Thailand out of its national crisis.