Next Sunday, Thailand will hold a general election to choose MPs for its House of Representatives. Here's a bit of info on it for those interested.
500 MPs will be elected - 400 MPs from constituencies and 100 from the party-list system.
Voters will each get two ballot papers – one to choose a constituency candidate and the other to choose a political party.
The political party votes will be used to calculate how many of the one hundred party-list MPs each party gets.
If, for example, 40 million people vote, the parties will need to get at least 400,000 votes to win a party-list MP seat (40 million divided by 100).
There are 52,287,045 eligible voters.
Each MP should represent an average of 162,766 residents.
Due to its population of 5.4 million, Bangkok has 33 MP seats. Nakhon Ratchasima has 16 constituencies. Isaan has a third of all constituency MPs.
Once all MPs are elected, the House of Representatives and the Senate will join together to vote for a prime minister. The Senate was appointed by the National Council for Peace and Order prior to the 2019 general election and contains 250 members.
This means that a winning candidate for prime minister must win at least 376 votes in the joint sitting of parliament. At the last election, all 250 members voted for Prayut to remain as prime minister.
This election is likely to be the last time in which the Senate is eligible to cast votes for prime minister, as this is a merely temporary provision of the 2017 constitution.
It is forbidden to release opinion survey results in the seven days up to the close of voting on election day.
Sources:
https://www.thaipbsworld.com/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-thailands-election/https://www.thaipbsworld.com/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-thailands-election/https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics/Thai-election/Prayuth-s-last-run-5-things-to-know-about-Thailand-s-May-14-vote