Eight-party coalition announces ambitious plans for reform, but makes no mention of a divisive royal insult law.
Thailand’s progressive Move Forward Party has signed an agreement with seven other parties to draft a new constitution, end monopolies and allow same-sex marriage if they are allowed to form a government, but made no mention of a controversial proposal to revise royal insult laws.
The 23-point agreement, unveiled on Monday, outlines the coalition’s policy plans and priorities as it seeks support among legislators to form a government after nine years of conservative, military-backed rule.
Move Forward, along with Pheu Thai, a populist party linked to former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, dominated last week’s election in a resounding rejection of the royalist military-backed parties that have controlled the country since a coup in 2014.
“This is another historic…