BANGKOK — 31 March 2026, Thailand’s National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) has formally approved a petition to the Supreme Court against 44 former Move Forward Party MPs over their push to amend Section 112 of the Criminal Code — the country’s lese-majeste law, which criminalises insults to the monarchy and carries heavy prison terms.
The decision, reached at a full board meeting, marks a procedural step forward from the NACC’s 9 February ruling, when it found grounds for serious ethical violations but had yet to finalise a court submission.
With approval now granted, the NACC’s legal office is authorised to submit the case to the Supreme Court, moving the matter from investigation into the judicial phase.
The case stems from a prior ruling that all 44 MPs breached ethical standards by jointly backing proposed amendments to Section 112.
If the Supreme Court accepts the petition without issuing additional orders, 10 sitting MPs from the People’s Party — successors to the dissolved Move Forward Party and among those named — would be immediately suspended from duty.
8 party-list MPs are at risk
- Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut, party leader
- Sirikanya Tansakul
- Rangsiman Rome
- Wayo Assawarungruang
- Pakornwut Udompipatskul
- Nattawut Buapratum
- Surachet Pravinvongvuth
- Natcha Boonchai-insawat
2constituency MPs representing Bangkok are also affected:
- Thirachai Phanthumas
- Taopiphop Limjittrakorn
Further proceedings now depend on whether the Supreme Court accepts the case and how it rules.



















































