Senator Norrasetr Postpones Land Bridge Bill to Next Week, Expresses Concerns Over Government's Rush to Close Deal, Suggests Public Referendum
Senator Norrasetr postponed a Senate debate on the Land Bridge project to next week, citing concerns that the government is rushing to close the deal without proper scrutiny and suggesting a public referendum may be needed.
At 9:30 a.m. on May 5, 2025, at Government House, Senator Norrasetr Prajyakorn, chairman of the Senate Committee on Political Development, Public Participation, Human Rights, Liberties and Consumer Protection, announced the postponement of a bill requesting the government to reconsider the Land Bridge project. Although the bill had been added to the Senate agenda, numerous senators expressed strong interest in debating it and requested time to study the details. At least two Senate committees, including his own and the Transport Committee, have been studying the issue and calling relevant agencies to clarify the facts. Senators requested moving the bill to next week to allow adequate time for preparation. "After careful consideration, I believe we need sufficient time to thoroughly study the information without rushing and without debate lacking a proper factual basis. Therefore, I've decided to postpone this bill to next week so that senators can properly prepare for the discussion," Norrasetr stated. He also mentioned submitting an interpellation to Deputy Prime Minister and Transport Minister Pipat Ratchakitprakarn, already on the agenda, requesting him to present clarifications and answer questions confidently about how this project will drive the nation's economic development. When asked whether appointing Deputy PM and Finance Minister Ek Niti Nitithaprasop as chairman of the Land Bridge project study committee and confirming no conflicts of interest could ease concerns, Norrasetr said the concerns remain unresolved. He noted the project is extraordinarily large with significant impacts, yet was not part of the ruling party's campaign platform nor the government's policy statement—making it suspicious that such a major initiative wasn't in the government's declaration but became the first priority it pushed aggressively. "This raises a question: why the rush? Is it to solve economic problems or to rush closing a deal?" Norrasetr asked. He warned that the government's introduction of the Southern Economic Corridor (SEC) law covering Chumphon, Ranong, Surat Thani, and Nakhon Si Thammarat provinces should be closely monitored, as there are lessons from the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC). The SEC law reportedly mirrors the EEC entirely, and the EEC experience—with its powerful committee expediting environmental laws—has essentially turned the eastern region into a "zero-margin capital" zone.