September 1992 Thai general election|
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All 360 seats in the House of Representatives 181 seats needed for a majority |
Turnout | 61.59% ( 2.35pp) |
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This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below. |
General elections were held in Thailand on 13 September 1992. They were the first elections after Black May and the end of the military dictatorship by the National Peace Keeping Council. Voter turnout was 62%.[1]
The Democrat Party emerged as the largest in parliament, winning 79 of the 360 seats. The Democrat Party subsequently formed a coalition government with the New Aspiration Party, the Palang Dharma Party, the Solidarity Party and the Social Action Party.
The central election committee used the motto "Sell your voice, sell your rights, like selling your life, treason".[2]
Results
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Party | Votes | % | Seats | +/– |
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| Democrat Party | 9,703,672 | 21.02 | 79 | +35 |
| Palang Dharma Party | 8,293,457 | 17.96 | 47 | +6 |
| National Development Party | 7,332,388 | 15.88 | 60 | +59 |
| Thai Nation Party | 7,274,474 | 15.76 | 77 | +3 |
| New Aspiration Party | 6,576,092 | 14.24 | 51 | –21 |
| Social Action Party | 1,863,360 | 4.04 | 22 | –9 |
| Seritham Party [th] | 1,645,776 | 3.56 | 8 | New |
| Thai Citizen Party | 1,413,032 | 3.06 | 3 | –4 |
| Solidarity Party | 1,067,237 | 2.31 | 8 | +2 |
| Mass Party | 681,718 | 1.48 | 4 | +3 |
| People Party [th] | 242,221 | 0.52 | 1 | –3 |
| People's Force | 73,460 | 0.16 | 0 | New |
Total | 46,166,887 | 100.00 | 360 | 0 |
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Valid votes | 19,118,798 | 97.43 | |
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Invalid/blank votes | 503,534 | 2.57 | |
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Total votes | 19,622,332 | 100.00 | |
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Registered voters/turnout | 31,860,156 | 61.59 | |
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Source: Nohlen et al. |
References