Natthaphong holds slight lead over Anutin - Who is Natthaphong?

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Natthaphong holds slight lead over Anutin - Who is Natthaphong?

Post by Gaybutton »

In Thailand's upcoming February 8 Prime Minister election, the two top contenders are Anutin, current Prime Minister well known to many of you, and Natthaphong, probably unknown to most of you. A recent poll indicates 39 year old Natthaphong slightly leads Anutin.

He might even merit Jun's approval - he is a vegetarian . . .

So, who is Natthaphong?

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Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut (Thai: ณัฐพงษ์ เรืองปัญญาวุฒิ, RTGS: Natthaphong Rueangpanyawut; born 18 May 1987) is a Thai politician and businessman who has served as the leader of the Opposition and leader of the People's Party since 2024. He has also been a member of the House of Representatives since 2019.

Born in Songkhla and raised in Bangkok, Natthaphong graduated from Chulalongkorn University with a Bachelor of Engineering degree in computer engineering. He then founded Absolute Management Solutions, a cloud service company where he served as an executive. In 2018, Natthaphong joined the Future Forward Party and the entered politics the following year and was elected to the House of Representatives for Bangkok's 28th Constituency (Bang Khae) in the 2019 general election.

In 2020, Natthaphong joined the Move Forward Party after the Future Forward Party was dissolved by the Constitutional Court. In 2023, he was re-elected to the House of Representatives as a party-list MP in the general election. In April 2024, Natthaphong served on a Move Forward Party seminar for the digital wallet scheme proposed by then–Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, where Natthaphong raised doubts the readiness of the Tang Rat app. In August of the same year, the Constitutional Court dissolved the Move Forward Party and Natthaphong joined the People's Party and was chosen as party leader on 9 August.

In September 2025, following the removal of Paetongtarn Shinawatra as prime minister, Natthaphong endorsed Anutin Charnvirakul, the leader of the Bhumjaithai Party and the former coalition partner of Paetongtarn's party Pheu Thai, for prime minister, in an exchange for the House of Representatives to be dissolved with a snap general election being held in four months and as well as constitutional ammendments. While the People's Party will support the minority coalition government of Anutin in a confidence and supply agreement, Natthaphong has stated that his party will remain in opposition and will also not take up any cabinet portfolio.

Early life

Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut was born on 18 May 1987 in Songkhla. He was given the nickname Teng (Thai: เท้ง, RTGS: Theng, Chinese: 清). A descendant of ethnic Chinese ancestors bearing the surname Lim (Thai: ลิ้ม, Chinese: 林), he is the fourth child of real-estate tycoon Suchart Ruangpunyawut, president of the Chanuntorn Development Group (a real estate business). Suchart's companies focus mainly around the development of luxury houses, townhouses and condominiums around Thonburi.[5] He completed his secondary education at Taweethapisek School, and graduated with a bachelor's in computer engineering at Chulalongkorn University, both in Bangkok. Natthaphong then established and served as an executive at his cloud service company Absolute Management Solutions Co Ltd following his graduation. He is vegetarian.

Political career

Natthaphong was elected to the House of Representatives in the 2019 general election after winning Bangkok's Constituency 28 (Bang Khae) for the Future Forward Party, narrowly defeating the Palang Pracharath Party's candidate. As a member of the FFP, he was entrusted by FFP leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit with overseeing the party's online platforms. He continued this role and became an MP of the Move Forward Party (MFP) after the FFP was dissolved in 2020.

As an MP for Move Forward

On 2 November 2022, MFP introduced a bill to the House of Representatives seeking to liberalise and end the oligopoly of the Thai liquor industry, which was narrowly defeated with 177 opposing and 174 in favour. The bill losing by a slim margin prompted Nattaphong to a propose a second vote, which still lost with 196 opposing and 194 in favour. The same day, the Thai government introduced new liquor regulations.

During the 2023 general election, Natthaphong decided to contest the election as a Party List MP. He left the position of MP of Bangkok's Constituency 28 on 20 March. During the election campaign, Natthaphong represented the MFP at an event at Chulalongkorn University on 3 May 2023 where he spoke on how innovation was crucial to ending corruption in Thailand. He argued that innovation would allow the Thai people to better criticise their government, but that innovation could only occur if the government allows it. He was re-elected to the House of Representatives. On 5 July, he submitted an asset declaration to the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) where he and his wife Natthaporn Chan-in declared their assets in total at ฿402.5 million, of which ฿397.3 million belonged to him.

Following the election, the MFP attempted to form a coalition with the Pheu Thai Party and other smaller parties with Pita Limjaroenrat as Prime Minister. Although the MFP was later dropped by Pheu Thai in favour of pro-military parties, Natthaphong was expected to become the Minister of Digital Economy and Society. MFP subsequently became the main opposition party in the House of Representatives.

On 20 April 2024, he served on a MFP seminar discussing the digital wallet scheme proposed by Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, where he raised doubts the readiness of the Tang Rat app. As the Deputy Secretary-General of the Information and Digital Systems Development Department of the MFP, he was present at the 2024 AI Ethics Exhibition at CentralWorld, Bangkok. At the exhibition, he stated his belief that Thailand should have policies to both promote and regulate the AI industry. Later on in 2024, Natthaphong became the Deputy Secretary-General of the MFP. On 7 July, he announced the party would field 10 to 20 CEO candidates in Provincial Administrative Organisations.

Leader of the People's Party and Leader of the Opposition

On 7 August 2024, the nine-judge panel of the Constitutional Court of Thailand voted unanimously among itself to dissolve the Move Forward Party. The decision also included 10-year political bans on 11 current and former party executives including Pita Limjaroenrat, who led the party to the 2023 general election, and Chaithawat Tulathon, leader of the MFP up to its dissolution.] However, the remaining 143 former MFP members kept their seats in the House of Representatives and reorganised themselves into a new party, joining and then rebranding the small Thinkakhao Chaovilai Party as the People's Party.

On the 9 August, Natthaphong was voted to be the new leader of Move Forward's successor, the People's Party, at the Thai Summit Tower in Bangkok. His election as party leader was unanimous.[17] Alongside Natthaphong, the leadership of the People's Party saw the former Deputy Leader of MFP Sirikanya Tansakun become the Deputy Leader of the People's Party, and former MFP director Sarayut Jailak become Secretary-General of the MFP. The election of Natthaphong as leader came as a surprise to many political observers who had expected Sirkianya to become party leader. She later stated that she never intended to become party leader, and that she had actually nominated Natthaphong to become leader.

After becoming party leader, Natthaphong said that the new party would continue MFP's ideology and that “our mission is to set up the ‘change’ government for the 2027 election.” Despite MFP's push to change Article 112 of the constitution on lèse-majesté laws, Natthaphong said that the People's Party would still continue to push for Article 112 to be amended, though with caution. This pledge was criticised by coalition parties. His support of the MFP's push to change Article 112 continues to put his situation in uncertainty. Two complaints have been filed against 44 former MFP MPs, although five had already been banned as a result of the August 7 decision. On August 8, NACC Office Secretary-General Niwatchai Kasemmongkol said that the NACC had ordered a probe against the remaining 39 MPs and 5 former for breaching ethical standards by sponsoring the bill to amend Article 112, including Natthaphong. If both the NACC indicts them and the Supreme Court rules against them, it would result in 10-year political bans. Natthaphong said in an interview on August 12 that he wasn't afraid and that he could properly defend himself in the Supreme Court which he said was part of the judicial system whilst the Constitutional Court was a 'political court'. Defending himself, Natthaphong said his support of the bill was limited to him only signing his name to sponsor it and that he didn't participate in anti-monarchist activities.

Natthaphong has also said that the party would aim to win enough seats to form a single-party government, due to the fact that Move Forward was dropped from a coalition with the current ruling Pheu Thai Party when it was attempting to form government after the 2023 election. The People's Party is currently the largest party in the House of Representatives with 143 MPs.

On 25 September 2024, a royal command was issued appointed Natthaphong as the Leader of the Opposition. The royal command was published in the Royal Gazette on 1 October 2024, and there was a royal command response ceremony the same day.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natthaphong_Ruengpanyawut
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Re: Natthaphong holds slight lead over Anutin - Who is Natthaphong?

Post by Dodger »

Natthaphong's previous connection with my hero "Pita" and the Move Forward Party make him a definite contender and I hope he wins.

That said, Move Forward was by far the people's favorite resulting in them receiving the most votes in the last election - but look what happened.

Natthaphone is also a hell of a lot cuter than Anutin. I bet he was a real knockout 25 years ago... :)
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Re: Natthaphong holds slight lead over Anutin - Who is Natthaphong?

Post by Gaybutton »

Dodger wrote: Sat Jan 24, 2026 7:49 am I bet he was a real knockout 25 years ago... :)
I think he still fits that description even now. My worry is if he does win, the same that happened to Pita could happen to him too. The problem is not the elections themselves, but what happens afterwards if the wrong people don't like the results.

Maybe one of these days in Thailand it will be whoever gets the most votes becomes the next Prime Minister, but Thailand is still a long way from that. If Natthaphong wins, I am fully expecting the opposition to try to block it, as they did with Pita. They even managed to get the courts to ban Pita from politics for 10 years.
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Re: Natthaphong holds slight lead over Anutin - Who is Natthaphong?

Post by Gaybutton »

People’s Party tops two polls ahead of Feb 8 vote

People’s Party leader Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut leads prime ministerial race

January 30, 2026

Two major opinion polls released on Friday show the People’s Party maintaining a clear lead in public support, with its prime ministerial candidate Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut becoming the top choice for voters nationwide.

A nationwide survey conducted by Suan Dusit Poll of Suan Dusit University, released on Friday, found the People’s Party ranking first in both party-list and constituency preferences, while Mr Natthaphong, 38, was the most favoured choice for prime minister.

People's Party leader Natthaphong's lead in the major opinion polls highlighted ‌the stiff challenge facing caretaker Prime Minister and Bhumjaithai Party leader Anutin Charnvirakul's bid to stay in power ahead of the Feb 8 general election.

The Suan Dusit Poll was conducted among 26,621 respondents across the country using stratified random sampling based on regional population proportions. Data was collected through field surveys between Jan 16 and 28.

For party-list vote preference, respondents said they would vote for the following parties under the party-list system:

People’s Party: 35.99%
Pheu Thai Party: 22.13%
Bhumjaithai: 18.92%
Democrat Party: 10.16%
Klatham Party: 2.40%

Others: 5.93% (including Palang Pracharath, Setthakij Thai, Ruam Thai Sang Chart, Seri Ruam Thai and Thai Sang Thai parties)
Undecided: 4.47%

For constituency MPs, voting intentions were as follows:

People’s Party: 33.46%
Bhumjaithai: 21.52%
Pheu Thai: 20.60%
Democrat Party: 8.13%
Klatham: 3.41%

Others: 9.50% (including Ruam Thai Sang Chart, Setthakij Thai, Palang Pracharath, Thai Kao Mai and Thai Sang Thai)
Undecided: 3.38%

When asked who they would like to see as the next prime minister, respondents named:

Mr Natthaphong (People’s Party): 35.07%
Yodchanan Wongsawat (Pheu Thai): 21.53%
Mr Anutin (Bhumjaithai): 16.11%
Abhisit Vejjajiva (Democrat Party): 12.97%
Capt Thammanat Prompow (Klatham): 3.61%

Others: 8.49%
Undecided: 2.22%

A separate survey by Nida Poll of the National Institute of Development Administration (Nida) echoed similar findings, with Mr Nattaphong once again topping the list of preferred prime ministerial candidates.

The survey, titled “Election Momentum 2026: Round Two”, was conducted nationwide between Jan 23 and 27, among 2,500 respondents above the age of 18.

Nida Poll found that:

29.08% supported Mr Natthaphong as prime minister
22.24% backed Mr Anutin
12.52% favoured Mr Abhisit
12.12% supported Mr Yodchanan
9.36% said they had yet to find a suitable candidate

For constituency MPs, respondents showed their support for:

People’s Party: 33.56%
Bhumjaithai: 22.76%
Pheu Thai: 16.92%
Democrat Party: 12.76%
Setthakij: 3.44%

For party-list votes, the results were:

People’s Party: 34.20%
Bhumjaithai: 22.60%
Pheu Thai: 16.20%
Democrat Party: 13.20%
Setthakij: 3.40%

Both polls suggest the People’s Party remains firmly in the lead as poll campaigning enters its final stretch, with Mr Natthaphong consolidating his position as the public’s preferred choice for the 33rd prime minister.

Earlier, the second round nationwide survey by Rajabhat Poll also showed similar results, with the People’s Party and Mr Natthaphong holding a commanding lead. Pheu Thai has moved into second place ahead of Bhumjaithai,

The survey of 11,700 respondents nationwide took place between Jan 19 and 25. The results were announced on Thursday at Nakhon Ratchasima Rajabhat University.

The People's Party is the successor to the Move Forward Party, which won the 2023 elections but was subsequently blocked by conservative lawmakers from forming a government and was later dissolved by court order.

Mr Anutin called a snap ‌election ‍on Dec 12 after less than 100 days as premier during a chaotic parliamentary session that could ‌have led to a no-confidence vote and the collapse of his fragile minority government.

It also came during Thailand's fierce three-week border conflict with Cambodia.

People’s Party on Friday rolled out eight nationwide campaign caravans covering Bangkok and all 76 provinces in a final push ahead of the election, with its leader Natthaphong calling on voters to cast both constituency and party-list ballots for the party.

Leading the launch of the party’s final campaign drive, Mr Natthaphong said the caravans would fan out across all provinces, despite opinion polls showing the party in the lead. He stressed that the party could not afford complacency and urged supporters to give his party a clear mandate by voting for it on both ballots.

Key party figures, including Parit Wachirasindhu, Natcha Boonchai‑insawat and Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, leader of the Progressive Movement who is serving as a campaign assistant, joined the launch of the campaign caravan for the so-called Luk Nam Khem route in Rangsit district of Pathum Thani province on Friday morning.

Mr Natthaphong is scheduled to address a major rally at the football field of Kathu district office in Phuket province on Friday evening.

Mr Thanathorn, speaking from a campaign vehicle before departure, said the Luk Nam Khem caravan would campaign along the east, covering 47 constituencies. The party aimed to retain all its existing seats and win as many new ones as possible, he said.

The party’s eight caravans set off simultaneously at about 8am on Friday, heading to all provinces. All vehicles were equipped with global positioning system (GPS) tracking, allowing the public to follow each caravan in real time from Friday onwards.

https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/po ... feb-8-vote
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Re: Natthaphong holds slight lead over Anutin - Who is Natthaphong?

Post by Dodger »

These polls don't indicate a "slight lead", they indicate a "significant lead".

I'm sure Natthaphong is walking around on hardwood floors right now - knowing how easy it is to have the rugs pulled from under his feet.

Just like Pita and his Move Forward Party who won the last election by a landslide, Natthaphong really has his work cut out.

I wish him well.
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Re: Natthaphong holds slight lead over Anutin - Who is Natthaphong?

Post by Gaybutton »

Dodger wrote: Sat Jan 31, 2026 8:19 am I wish him well.
if he becomes Prime Minister I hope he will make significant improvements, especially for us expats (although expats are probably way down at the bottom of his 'to-do' list if we are even on his list at all). I hope it won't be yet another "everything changes, but nothing changes".
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