
Kaewta Thisana criticized the Prachachon Party for fielding Natthapong Ruangpanyawut in the prime ministerial vote, accusing them of political theater knowing full well they cannot win. She described them as an opposition acting for show, obsessed with winning through rhetoric.
At 14:02 on 14 March 2026 GMT+7. Ms. Thisana Chunhawat, also known as Kaewta, former Bangkok MP from the Prachachon Party (PChon). Posted a message viaFacebook.Stated that the Prachachon Party’s decision to nominate Mr. Natthapong Ruangpanyawut, the party leader, to contest the prime ministerial vote, despite knowing full well they have no chance of winning, is not a genuine effort to form a government. Instead, it is a political game aimed at creating the image of 'having fought' and hopes to gain momentum, memes, and criticisms to throw back at the Pheu Thai Party (PT).
Meanwhile, the current political reality is that the Bhumjaithai Party (BJT), led by Mr. Anutin Charnvirakul, has already taken the lead in forming the government and announced its coalition structure. The Prachachon Party only recently officially decided to nominate Mr. Natthapong to compete for prime ministerial position in parliament. If democracy principles are truly upheld, it must start with respecting the facts of the majority's voice and the feasibility of government formation. It is not right to knowingly have no chance but still perform political theater to stir public emotions, then use supporters’ disappointment as a weapon to attack others. This is not principled politics but image politics.
Ms. Thisana further revealed that Prachachon’s problem is not just losing the vote but also creating unrealistic expectations. When results do not meet their claims, they turn to rhetoric accusing the other side of betrayal, even though they knew the game, the numbers, and the outcome from the start. Repeating this behavior normalizes political lies, selective principle claims only when benefiting themselves, and acting as a theatrical opposition rather than delivering real results for the country.
"To be frank, this does not improve people’s livelihoods, solve economic problems, reduce living costs, or increase people’s political bargaining power. What it yields are only content, memes, and fan wars on social media. Politics obsessed with winning rhetorical battles but not benefiting the public ultimately uses the people as mere backdrops for party games."