Five Parties Support Academic's Proposal to Eliminate Jail Time for Unpaid Fines and Revise Constituency Ballot Papers
Five political parties backed an academic's proposal to replace jail time for unpaid fines with community service and add candidate names to constituency ballots, addressing concerns about imprisonment of poor defendants and election confus
At 11:15 AM on April 29, 2026, representatives from five political parties—including Kravairt Parisananung (Ang Thong, Bhumjaithai), Prachit Watcharasinthsuthon (Party List, Pheu Thai), Chaturon Chaisaeng (Party List, Pheu Thai), Arthakorn Sirilerthakyakor (Chachoengsao, Kla Tham), and Sathit Wongnongtoy (Party List, Thai Democrats)—received a letter from Professor Prinya Tewanirumitrkul of Thammasat University's Faculty of Law proposing amendments to eliminate imprisonment in lieu of fines and revise the Organic Act on House elections.
Prinya stated he represented law students and faculty, presenting two main proposals. First, he addressed the issue of poor defendants unable to pay fines being imprisoned instead, despite potential community service options being underutilized. All five parties agreed this problem should be fixed by amending Criminal Code Section 29, replacing jail time with community service.
Second, regarding past election issues, Prinya proposed four improvements to the electoral law: citizen convenience, transparent vote counting, public participation in election monitoring, and timely announcement of eligible voters and district-level results.
All five parties agreed on one key reform: constituency ballots currently show only candidate numbers without names or party affiliations, creating confusion across 400 districts with varying numbers for the same party's candidates. This enables cross-constituency ballot misuse and compromises election integrity. The parties unanimously support adding candidate and party names to constituency ballots.
Prinya noted Thammasat's Faculty of Law recommends announcing eligible voter counts within 24 hours of voting and district-level results within 48 hours, echoing procedures from the Ministry of Interior era.