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Opinion: 3 Days, 3 Key Votes – And No End in Sight for Brexit

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May speaks in 2017 during a campaign visit to Norwich, England. Photo: Stefan Rousseau / Associated Press
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May speaks in 2017 during a campaign visit to Norwich, England. Photo: Stefan Rousseau / Associated Press

By Scott L. Greer, Garret Martin, Holly Jarman from The Conversation

On Wednesday, the British Parliament overwhelmingly rejected – for a second time – a Brexit plan worked out by Prime Minister Theresa May.

A day later, the lawmakers voted against a “hard Brexit” – one without any approved plan.

Then, on Thursday, British lawmakers voted 412 to 202 to delay an exit from the European Union, which had been planned for March 29. They also voted not to call a second referendum to allow the British people to accept or reject Prime Minister May’s Brexit plan.

Three experts on the European Union consider the lasting effects of the delay and uncertainty.

 

A Damaging Spectacle

Another week of drama at the Palace of Westminster, host of the United Kingdom’s two houses of Parliament. The last three days witnessed a flurry of Brexit activities. Parliament scheduled multiple votes, debates, amendments. Factions inside Westminster jockeyed for control and Ministers resigned. And Prime Minister Theresa May literally lost her voice.

With the dust now settled, this much is clear. Members of Parliament (MPs), from across the major parties, still greatly dislike the withdrawal deal from the EU negotiated by Theresa May.

These same MPs also reject the option of crashing out of the EU without a deal. And they overwhelmingly supported requesting a delay for Brexit to happen, beyond the planned exit date of March 29, 2019. Such an extension, and its precise length, would still require the unanimous agreement of the 27 remaining states of the EU, which are scheduled to meet on Thursday and March 22.

In other words, no one knows when the Brexit saga will end.

There’s no denying that Brexit, with its intrigue and uncertainty, is compelling viewing. Political junkies may think of it as “Game of Thrones” without the dragons and violence. That day-to-day focus can, however, easily obscure the fact that Brexit has been a complete calamity, one for which the U.K. is already paying high costs, and will continue to do so.

First, the spectacle of Parliament repeatedly failing to agree on a deal has greatly tarnished the reputation of the U.K. as a well-managed country. It is now 994 days and counting since the referendum in June 2016, with no clear end in sight.

Second, the endless bickering in Parliament and inability to compromise is fueling a deep disenchantment with politics. More than two-thirds of the public in the U.K. does not feel represented by current political parties.

And third, the prolonged Brexit negotiations are only further polarizing an already very divided British society.

Like all good shows, Brexit will eventually come to an end. But its legacy will be felt for years to come.

 

The Brexit Unicorn Has Damaged British Democracy

In the two years since it took place, it’s become clear that the Brexit referendum campaign was a gross failure of democratic politics.

The campaign was suffused with campaign finance illegalities and foreign interference. But it was also a debate in which every key term was undefined. No one who voted in the referendum could be certain what Brexit would look like.

Here’s a comparison. When Scots were asked to vote on independence from Britain in 2014, the Scottish government offered them a 649-page policy document on everything from post-independence fisheries management to the status of the queen.

But when British voters were invited to vote on Brexit, they were offered nowhere near as much information. There was no specification of what leaving would mean, how it would work or what the costs might be. Into the vacuum of information rushed misperception and lies.

Brexit remains ill-defined because it promised the impossible – a mythical unicorn of sovereignty, wealth, national greatness and reduced immigration. Such a package is attractive, but unavailable to a country of the U.K.‘s size, position and wealth.

There is no form of Brexit, for example, that can improve the National Health Service, as we and co-authors showed in a recent article. But many voters supported Brexit in the belief, encouraged by the Leave campaign, that Brexit would mean more money for publicly funded health care.

Competing demands from different groups to deliver the impossible have damaged the U.K.’s political system. That’s because, for many politicians, the politics of Brexit are now about avoiding the blame for the consequences of a damaging decision.

The problem with the politics of casting and avoiding blame is that finger-pointing and dodging finger-pointing can get in the way of solving problems. Brexit is a clear case of that.

The politics of the U.K. are now focused not on managing or fixing problems, but on blaming others for them. The focus on blaming others for divisive and dangerous Brexit policies will scar Britain for decades, since the politics of disunity and blame will live long after 2019.

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The Server Did It: Facebook Gives Vague Explanation For Outage

Facebook, Messenger and Instagram apps displayed on an iPhone in a photo taken Wednesday. Photo: Jenny Kane / Associated Press
Facebook, Messenger and Instagram apps displayed on an iPhone in a photo taken Wednesday. Photo: Jenny Kane / Associated Press

NEW YORK — Facebook went down for almost a full day across parts of the world, but it’s still not saying exactly what happened.

All the social network said Thursday was that the outages, which affected users and advertisers worldwide, resulted from a “server configuration change.” It offered no further details.

Facebook and its apps — Instagram, Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp — started experiencing problems midday Wednesday on the U.S. East Coast. Facebook was still having sporadic issues Thursday morning.

Read: #FacebookDown? #IGDown? Thai Net Loses Will to Live.

Facebook did not say how many users were affected or why the outage took so long to fix. In a tweet about 24 hours after the problems began, Facebook apologized and thanked people for their patience. It didn’t elaborate on the server change.

The outage is yet another publicity problem for a company already dealing with privacy issues and regulatory probes.

The disruption isn’t likely to hurt advertisers much, since they usually pay for ads per click or impression. But they lose potential customers who might have seen their ads when the site and apps were down. Longer term, Facebook’s reputation with advertisers and investors could be damaged, said Wedbush Securities managing director Dan Ives.

It didn’t help that it took Facebook so long to explain what was going on, he said. Facebook said on Wednesday that the problem was not related to a “distributed denial of service” or DDoS attack, a type of attack that hackers use to interrupt service to a site, but didn’t provide any other details until Thursday.

“In these situations a lack of transparency is not a good look,” Ives said. “The longer something like this lasts, the more questions there are.”

The disruption seemed spotty, with some apps and parts of the apps working for some but not others. While some less active users may not have noticed that Facebook services were down, other frequent users and advertisers keenly felt its absence.

The Drummers Garden Center & Floral, a plant store in Mankato, Minnesota, was unable to hold a live video Q&A on Facebook that it had planned for weeks. Customers and employees were both confused.

“I hope our customers aren’t upset that we couldn’t communicate with them. We’re not used to it being down,” said Jackie Karsten, the marketing coordinator for the store. She said two people called the store to ask if they were doing something wrong on their end. The Q&A has been rescheduled for Monday — which the store announced in a post to its Facebook page.

Many users had a ready outlet for their frustrations: Twitter. Social media power user U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, for example, lamented the lack of Instagram Wednesday evening on Twitter. “Is Instagram still down? Bc after 2 months almost furnitureless in DC I am trying to take you all on the riveting adventure of getting: a chair,” she tweeted with a smiley face emoji.

Users have learned to take social media breakdowns in stride, said Tim Bajarin, president of consultancy Creative Strategies.

“People have dealt with these types of outages for some time now,” he said. “While they are annoying, it has happened enough that a lot of people are now conditioned to roll with the punches.”

Steve Jones, a professor of communications at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said the fallout might have been far different if the outage took place ahead of or during a major news event, like an election.

“If today were the day before the next presidential election, how would we hold Facebook accountable for an outage with regard to an electoral outcome?” he asked. “We’re not going to redo an election.”

Story: Mae Anderson

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Melons and Mellow Take Root on Thailand’s ‘Watermelon Island’

TRANG — On an island filled with watermelon farmers, be the one that plants seedless ones.

Koh Sukorn, a lesser-known attraction off the coast of Trang province long known for its watermelons, Tawatchai Kaimusik has been multiplying profits with his first harvest of a new breed: large, red and devoid of seeds.

“I’m the very first one to plant this type here,” Tawatchai said. “Unlike normal watermelon plants, which can be harvested once, this one can be harvested three times.”

Sukorn Island is home to about 2,500 people, including 40 watermelon farmers who work on a 150-rai (24-hectare) stretch of land. Among foreign tourists, it’s a place one can enjoy the rural lifestyle while snacking on fresh farm-grown melons – quite unlike the loud touristy vibes found in places such as Phuket.

Tawatchai planted a breed of watermelons called Happy Family, which weigh 6-12 kilograms and sell for about 20 baht per kilogram, as opposed to regular watermelons which sell for about 35 percent less.

Tawatchai says the watermelons have better yields, use less water and fertilizer and take up less space on his farm than normal watermelons, which all combined has taken his profit yields up from 6,000 baht per crop to 50,000 baht.

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Celebrate Summer with “Khao Chae Chao Wang” at Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park (Sponsored)

BANGKOK — When the summer brings warm breeze to Bangkok, it’s time to put Khao Chae, a traditional signature summer snack, on the table to relieve the heat and soothe the mind. Fill the summer with savory and refreshing dish, the fragrance of jasmine flowers and 7 delectable condiments at Siam Tea Room and Goji Kitchen + Bar at Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park throughout April and May 2019.

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Siam Tea Room

Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park, Bangkok’s largest luxury hotel, is meticulously craft summer’s favorite “Khao Chae Chao Wang” to put the heat at bay. Originally created in Ratchaburi, the recipe is prepared to offer as tribute to the heavenly gods and treat the monks during Thai traditional New Year or Songkran festival. Sao Hai rice is cooked and infused with aromatic smoke until supple and fragrant. The rice is then added with smoke-scented floral water made from 5 types of fragrant flowers – ylang-ylang, bread flower (chomanad), damask rose, white champaka and jasmine – that gives every bite a subtle, cooling floral scent.

The ice used is also made from jasmine flower-infused water to even further enhance the aroma.

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The floral rice is served alongside the 7 condiments. There’s deep-fried “look kapi” where fish, shrimp is mashed and mixed with shrimp paste and herbs, rolled into small balls, coated with egg and better then deep fried to golden. The stuffed bell pepper is made with de-seeded bell pepper that is stuffed with seasoned pork and shrimp, steamed and then wrapped in fried egg net before serving. The stuffed shallot is filled with seasoned grilled catfish that is then coated with egg and deep fried to crispiness. There are also pork floss made from boiled pork and caramelized sugar, sweet stir-fried ray fish where the meat is fluffed and added with sugar, sweet and salty stir-fried turnip and the crispy shrimp-stuffed butterfly pea flowers that are soft on the inside.

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Savor the traditional taste of Khao Chae Chao Wang from Ratchaburi at Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park at Siam Tea Room daily from 1 April to 31 May 2019 between 11.30 hrs. – 17.00 hrs. at THB 490++ per set or THB 590++ for take-home.

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Goji Kitchen + Bar

Khao Chae is also included in the dinner buffet and Sunday Brunch at Goji Kitchen + Bar on 1-30 April 2019. The dinner buffet is served between 18:00 hrs. – 22:00 hrs. is priced THB 1,388++ per person from Sunday to Thursday and THB 1,978++ per person on Friday and Saturday.  Sunday Brunch is served from 11.45 hrs. to 14.30 hrs. at THB 2,128++ per person.

For more information and reservation, please contact +66 (0) 2 059 5999, email [email protected]

Or connect with us via these channels:

Website:                  www.bangkokmarriottmarquisqueenspark.com

Facebook:                  https://www.facebook.com/siamtearoom/

Line official account:          @siamtearoom

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Thai Parties Woo Young Voters, but One May Hit the Mark

In this Saturday, Feb. 23, 2019, photo, youth band Rap Against Dictatorship, who's songs have condemned the military's involvement in government, perform in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

BANGKOK — You could call it the 7 million-voter question: Will young people like the ones who turned out on a recent Saturday night to listen to politically hip rappers also make it to the polls for the upcoming general election? And do they share the anger at the established order being sung and shouted about onstage?

The country in which this year’s 7 million eligible first-time voters have grown up has experienced two army coups since 2006, violent political polarization and a nasty crackdown on freedom of expression by the military clique that has held the reins since a 2014 takeover.

Topping the recent concert bill was the group Rap Against Dictatorship, whose surprise hit, “My Country’s Got That,” lambasts the hypocrisy of Thai society. Some of the song’s milder lyrics describe Thailand as “the country whose Parliament is a parlor.”

The breakthrough song has garnered almost 59 million views since its release on YouTube last October. Judging by the crowd at the concert, most of its fans hail from the 18-to-35-year-old demographic that makes up roughly a quarter of Thailand’s 51 million-strong electorate.

This generation is too young to hold many memories of a Thailand that was not politically troubled.

If it is unsympathetic to army rule, it also does not harbor any nostalgic affection for former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a billionaire populist whose 2006 overthrow ushered in a political dark age in what had been one of Southeast Asia’s most promising democracies.

Unlike Thaksin’s hardcore “red shirt” followers and his rabid “yellow shirt” opponents — groups whose violent street protests helped derail electoral politics — their allegiances are up for grabs.

Political parties are taking notice, mostly by showcasing their younger candidates.

The Democrat Party, the country’s oldest, has its “New Dem” group of 21 young politicians led by 26-year-old Parit Wacharasindhu, a nephew of party leader Abhisit Vejajjiva, a former prime minister who himself once capitalized on his youthful image. Another of its members is Surabot Leekpai, the 30-year-old son of another former Democrat prime minister, Chuan Leekpai.

Another group, Bhumjaithai, previously known as an old-fashioned patronage-driven regional party, has been rebranding with campaign posters hitting hot-button issues close to urban millennials’ hearts — liberalization of marijuana laws, clear legalization of ride-sharing services and the easing of repayment terms for student loans.

Even the Palang Prachatrath Party, more or less a proxy for the military that supports returning the current army-installed prime minister to office, showed off 30 young members at a news conference, many contesting parliamentary seats in the capital, Bangkok.

But it’s the Future Forward Party, founded last March, that seems to have captured the imagination of many young voters.

Party chief Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, who can tap into a family fortune from the auto parts industry, projects an image similar to a Silicon Valley entrepreneur. Tall and trim, and favoring casual dress, the 40-year-old is tech-savvy and practices extreme sports. He also has a low-profile history of supporting progressive organizations, while most of his core team is younger and directly involved in activist groups promoting causes such as rights for the disabled, the LGBT community and the #MeToo movement.

“My idea is to make this party stand for democratic principles,” Thanathorn said at the party’s debut last year. “We will make democracy a part of every decision-making process from the choosing of party members, the determining of party direction and strategy, to the developing of party policies.”

Thanathorn formerly served on the board of Matichon Group, the parent company of Khaosod English.

The party’s broad-stroke policies are a response to Thailand’s political impasse: radically reforming the coup-inclined military and rewriting the military-imposed constitution to restore democracy.

“I think the conflict over the last 12 years has educated the people that politics is important to their lives,” Thanathorn said in an interview at a campaign event at Siam University in Bangkok. “Political awareness in this country has never been higher.”

Boonyanuch Prachasingh, a 20-year-old student at the university, said she is looking for a party with strong policies on education, democratization and transparency, and capable of change. She said Future Forward sounds interesting “because they are making a point of encouraging us to pay attention to politics.”

A fellow student, 21-year-old Kittiphum Pannadermitri, believes the economy is the most pressing issue.

“I think Thanathorn is from a new generation and has new ideas. I think he could help improve the economy, help Thai farmers, and tackle pollution problems,” he said.

Concertgoer Sawitree Puangngern, 23, said interest in the election is high among her peers, and she has already decided to vote for Future Forward.

“I am interested in the party that says they want change,” she said. “I want the military out from politics and I want people to have their rights back.”

Although Future Forward is hoping it can pick up as many as 50 to 70 parliamentary seats, it faces substantial hurdles as a newly established grass-roots party facing experienced opponents.

It also has drawn scurrilous attacks online from conservative elements of Thai society, who paint Thanathorn as a stalking horse for Thaksin because he espouses progressive policies that also are supported by Thaksin’s supporters. That his uncle was a top member of Thaksin’s party and served in one of his Cabinets heightens their suspicions.

Still, the party’s prospects for capturing the youth vote look good, said Prajak Kongkirati, a lecturer in political science at Bangkok’s Thammasat University.

“They are popular and their policies are popular,” he said. “They advocate change and radical reforms. So the youth who are frustrated with the stagnation of the country, they want to see a real change. And Thanathorn is kind of their hope, represents something new, speaks their own language and can connect to the youth.”

Story: Tassanee Vejpongsa

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“Ajinomoto” Sponsors the 30th Sea Games to Be Held in the Philippines (Sponsored)

Recently, Mr. Kaoru Kurashima (2nd from right), President of Ajinomoto Co., (Thailand) Ltd. as the representative of Ajinomoto Co., Inc., Japan (AJICO), signed an official sponsorship agreement with Mr. Allan Peter Cayetano (2nd from left), chairperson of the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organising Committee (PHISGOC) as the first Japanese company entering the highest rank sponsor of the 30th SEA Games to be held in the Philippines from November 30 to December 11, 2019.

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Royal Defamation Reform Remains Untouchable Topic, Survey Finds

Suwat Liptapanlop of Chart Pattana Party rallies today in Sakon Nakhon province.
Suwat Liptapanlop of Chart Pattana Party rallies today in Sakon Nakhon province.

BANGKOK — No major political party has a policy to amend the controversial lese majeste law, an international human rights organization revealed Thursday.

None of 32 political parties who responded to 15 multiple-choice questions from the International Federation for Human Rights said they would try to amend the law, according to the survey’s findings.

Although many significant and new influential parties participated, the Paris-based federation got no response from three of the largest – the pro-junta Palang Pracharat Party, pro-Thaksin Pheu Thai and pragmatic Bhumjathai.

“Bhumjaithai and Phalang Pracharat made clear that they did not want to participate from the outright,” the federation’s regional director, Andrea Giorgetta, said Thursday at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand. “As for Pheu Thai, we waited until the last minute but it never came.”.

The Democrat, Action Coalition for Thailand, Chart Thai Pattana and Future Forward parties took no stance when asked what measures would it take on Article 112 of the Criminal Code, aka the lese majeste law, which effectively makes any action deemed a slight against the monarchy a crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

Speaking at a panel discussion of the findings, Yingcheep Atchanont of legal reform group iLaw said even self-styled progressives such as Future Forward won’t touch the law because they are avoiding potential distractions to their more immediate goal of denying another term in office to junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha.

“I will leave some space for them to change their mind,” he said.

Of the 32 political parties surveyed, only four on the margins said they would support removing jail time as punishment for the crime: the Commoner, Mahachon, Green and Thai Power Labor.

As for capital punishment, Future Forward supports abolishing the death penalty for all crimes. The Democrat and Action Coalition for Thailand parties responded that it should remain in place for all current capital crimes, while Chart Thai Pattana said it should not be used for drug-related offenses.

Overall, a majority of the parties supported the capital punishment in some cases while only nine opposed it.

On the question of what could be done about the military’s outsized role in the nation’s affairs and allegations of abuse among its ranks, the Democrat Party said it would abolish the draft. Only five other parties supported that position.

Future Forward was one of just under half of the parties to say it would slash its budget. Both Chart Thai Pattana and Action Coalition for Thailand said they would establish an independent commission to investigate cadet deaths and hold the responsible parties accountable.

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Away From Dull Rallies, Thai Election Sizzles Online

Image: Huaitoon / Facebook
Image: Huaitoon / Facebook

From parodies of Thai Line spam to pairing political parties with Westerosi factions from “Game of Thrones,” the digital seas are churning with snark and parody days before a much-anticipated election.

Here are a few of the hot political memes that have circulated through the digital bloodstream in recent days.

In this graphic posted Friday, someone matched the major political parties to characters from HBO’s “Game of Thrones”

In it, pro-junta party Phalang Pracharat is power-addicted queen Cersei Lannister, while its archrival Pheu Thai Party is sulky protagonist Jon Snow “demanding justice.” Progressive newcomer Future Forward is young dragon queen Danaerys Targaryen, who is described as “the fiery newcomer.” Chaos-striver and expert fence-sitter Littlefinger stands in for the Democrat Party and a Westerosi religious zealot is the Buddhist virtue-signaling People’s Reform Party.

A comic imagines a rupture between anti-junta confederates. It in, a deputy Future Forward leader and former military man charged with cybercrimes this week vows to get the police out of politics, much to the chagrin of three allies and former policemen: Gen. Sereepisut Temeeyavets of the Thai Liberal Party, Pheu Thai’s Capt. Chalerm Yubamrung of and former police Lt. Col. Thaksin Shinawatra.

Although Future Forward has its own billionaire leader, the pro-establishment wing has worked overtime to associate it with Thaksin, the ousted premiere it most reviles.

“Cults of personality,” reads a caption to a side-by-side comparison of party members and Thaksin’s Redshirt supporters. In one comment, a user posted an image morphing Thaksin and Thanathorn into “Thaknathorn Shinroongruangwatra.” “Assemble! I’m rich, and I’m not corrupt!” he wrote.

When Prayuth recently mugged for a camera like Burt Reynolds was still the ideal of masculinity, it was like a challenge to the internet. And people couldn’t keep their Photoshoppin’ fingers off them after his party used one for a completely irony-free “Happy Tuesday” spam post usually found in Line groups comprised of baby boomers. It spawned a slew of copycats and started drawing in other pols.

Several memes addressed how the 250 junta-appointed senators are allowed a say in who is the next premier – and edge they’re expected to give to Prayuth. This video inserts Prayuth into 2012’s “The Dictator” as Sasha Baren Cohen in a slightly unfair race.

‘How many people do you need to conquer 70 million?’ ‘I need just 125,’ resurrects perennial favorite “300” to highlight Phalang Pracharat’s need for only 125 votes in the lower house if the full senate goes for Prayuth.

And of course there’s one of the most popular political webcomics, which has been pumping out election related frames daily, such as Drakeposting Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva’s position on Prayuth’s candidacy.

Ditch the lulz for cold hard facts on the election with our guide on how to vote, a brief explainer on the major parties and more of our election coverage.

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Thai Net Reacts to Party Dissolution With Pungent Memes

#SkyLovesDaddy: How a Politician Became a Sweeping Thai Net Hashtag

Why #LongLiveSlender is Exploding Across Thai Social Media

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Thai Election for Dummies: Guide to the Parties

Thai Election for Dummies: How, When, Where to Cast Your Vote

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Prime Minister Not a Gov’t Official, State Agency Rules

Photo: Uncle Tu Fighting / Facebook

BANGKOK — Pre-election legal skirmishing continued Thursday with new developments and threats in the home stretch leading to Election Day.

Junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha escaped potential prosecution with the release of one legal opinion as his party was hit with a fresh challenge alleging abuse of state power to buy votes.

Though Prayuth travels the world representing Thailand and meeting heads of state, the state ombudsman today ruled that the prime minister is, in fact, not a government official. The Ombudsman Office’s unanimous ruling therefore meant the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party did not violate regulations by nominating Prayuth to be its candidate.

Read: EC Threatens to Disband Future Forward for ‘Outsider Influence’

Secretary-General Raksagecha Chaechai said being a government official requires four characteristics: being legally elected, possessing active law enforcement authority, being under the state, and receiving regular payment.

The office determined Prayuth didn’t meet two of the criteria as he wasn’t elected, and his junta operates outside of state authority.

The ruling came in response to a complaint filed last week by transparency gadfly Srisuwan Janya.

In another case, a Pheu Thai MP candidate in Lopburi filed complaints today alleging Prayuth and his party violated election law by campaigning there in a way that amounted to vote buying.

Party secretary Sonthirat Sonthijirawong was caught on video promising at a February rally there that Phalang Pracharat would increase credits on public welfare cards if it wins.

Sonthirat has said making such promises are routine on the campaign trail.

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In Success of ‘Captain Marvel,’ a Defeat For Trolls

This image released by Disney-Marvel Studios shows Brie Larson in a scene from
This image released by Disney-Marvel Studios shows Brie Larson in a scene from "Captain Marvel." Image: Disney-Marvel Studios

NEW YORK — Capt. Marvel possesses superhuman strength, cosmic awareness and, it turns out, the ability to vanquish trolls.

Marvel’s “Captain Marvel,” the superhero factory’s first movie fronted solely by a female hero, last weekend notched the sixth largest global opening ever and in five days of release has already sold USD$524.1 million tickets worldwide, Disney said Wednesday. That was despite the efforts of a vocal minority to sabotage the movie’s release in a campaign to lower audience scores and disseminate false information about the film’s star, Brie Larson.

It’s a playbook borrowed from the political realm and brought into the movie theater. And the movies that have drawn such attention have, more times than not, starred women in franchises previously dominated by males. But after similar campaigns against “Ghostbusters” and “The Last Jedi,” Hollywood studios are fighting back, as are sites like Rotten Tomatoes and YouTube.

Paul Feig’s 2016 female-led “Ghostbusters” remake, which Donald Trump himself spoke out against, was among the first films to be targeted by users rating it lowly on sites like the Internet Movie Database, orIMDb, before the film was even released. On YouTube, it was the most disliked trailer ever.

A similar strategy was employed on Rian Johnson’s “Star Wars Episode VII: The Last Jedi,” which — like “Ghostbusters” — had, and continues to have, genuine detractors who simply didn’t like the movie. But there were concerted efforts to amplify criticism of “The Last Jedi,” which notably expanded the “Star Wars” universe with new heroes like Laura Dern’s resistance leader and Kelly Marie Tran’s maintenance worker. Tran eventually deleted her Instagram account after months of harassment.

So when Johnson and Feig saw similar attempts being made ahead of the release of “Captain Marvel,” they recognized the handiwork.

“Pretty much the new ‘Certified Fresh’ badge,” said Johnson, linking to an article about review bombing on “Captain Marvel.” ”What a sad, sad pathetic group of people are who organize to do things like this,” Feig said.

The amplified backlashes to both “The Last Jedi” (which opened strong but faded) and “Ghostbusters” (which disappointed altogether) appeared to hurt the films’ bottom lines.

But the tide may be turning. The same Facebook group that organized to vote down “The Last Jedi” also went after Ryan Coogler’s “Black Panther.” That time, though, both Facebook and Rotten Tomatoes moved to counter the group, which was removed from Facebook. “Black Panther” became the third highest grossing film of all time domestically, not accounting for inflation.

And “Captain Marvel,” which drew a majority male audience (55 percent), similarly showed no signs of any ill effect.

“If those trolls had any negative impact on the box office, somebody point it out to me because I just don’t see it,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for Comscore. “The trolls, they’re not going derail a movie like this. For the fans, they love Marvel, they love the brand. Other than a terrible movie, nothing would dissuade the Marvel fans and the movie fans from coming out and seeing a film.”

Marvel, whose 21 films have earned a combined USD$18 billion in global box office, is indeed about as unassailable as any studio ever has been. “Captain Marvel” was also cunningly positioned as a need-to-see appetizer to “Avengers: Endgame,” due out April 26.

But “Captain Marvel” found itself in the crosshairs with some largely in response to Larson’s advocacy for diversity in film and in those who write about it. A USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative study last year found that, for the 100 top grossing films in 2017, 77.8 percent of the critics counted on Rotten Tomatoes were male and 86 percent were white.

At the time of the study’s release, Larson said: “I do not need a 40-year-old white dude to tell me what didn’t work for him about ‘A Wrinkle in Time.'” Larson later said she, after noticing that critics reviewing movies “appeared to be overwhelmingly white male” decided to make her press interviews “more inclusive.”

“This film is about trying to put in as many little revolutions as possible,” she told AV Club. “And as many little nods to what that experience is like, being a woman, so that other people could feel less alone.”

Online critics exaggerated her words in videos like one titled “Brie Larson hates white men.” Others said her character didn’t smile enough in promotional materials. Larson responded with a photo of giant grins superimposed on previous male Marvel heroes.

But perhaps more importantly, steps were taken to mitigate any troll effect on “Captain Marvel.” Two studio executives who spoke anonymously because they weren’t authorized to speak about their about their anti-troll efforts, said they’ve become more adept and prepared for combating organized negativity around a release. There are no more sneak attacks.

And the avenues for manipulating audience perception are dwindling.

YouTube, where anti-Larson videos proliferated ahead of the film’s opening, chose to categorize “Brie Larson” as a news search, not a general one. The algorithm tweak, first initiated to combat conspiracy videos after the 2017 Las Vegas music festival shooting, pushed videos from news and entertainment outlets up, and rants like “Brie Larson is Ruining Marvel!” down.

Rotten Tomatoes, which ranks both critic and audience scores, removed the potential for audience scoring before a movie is released. Though an initial wave of negative audience ratings had pushed the score for “Captain Marvel” down, by Wednesday it was at 63 percent — almost exactly the film’s average on Metacritic.

Dana Benson, a representative for the Fandango-owned Rotten Tomatoes, said the site is exploring more adjustments to prevent the gaming of its audience scores including a “verified purchase” component to reviews, similar to Amazon’s system, so to audience reviews come from those who have seen the movie.

“We’ve seen it with enough movies that we know we have to evolve our system,” said Benson of the trolling. “Anyone that has an open system like we do has received this type of attention. Moving forward, we want to make sure our users can trust our audience score and that we find different ways to verify the reviews.”

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