Siamese coup d'état of 1933

The Siamese Coup d’état of June 1933 (Thai: รัฐประหาร 20 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2476) was considered the first time in Thai history that the military successfully overthrew the constitutional government. The coup took place peacefully on 20 June 1933 in Bangkok. The coup was led by Colonel Phraya Phahol Pholphayuhasena against the premiership of the Premier Phraya Manopakorn Nititada. The coup was in effect a counter-coup against the dictatorial policies of Phraya Mano stemming from the Yellow cover dossier crisis.

Background

Phraya Mano, First Prime Minister of Siam

On 24 June 1932, the Khana Ratsadon (or the People's Party) carried out a peaceful revolution against the rule of King Prajadhipok (or Rama VII) the absolute monarch of Siam. The party forced the king to give up his absolute powers and gave the Siamese people their first written constitution. On 10 December of that year, a "permanent" charter was promulgated with the blessings of the new constitutional monarch.

The constitution stripped the king of most of his powers, where they were instead exercised by the new Government of Siam; which included the People's Assembly (Thai: สภาผู้แทนราษฎร) (the legislature), the People's Committee (Thai: คณะกรรมการราษฎร), (the executive) and the Supreme Court, (the judiciary) (Thai: ศาลฎีกา). The president of this new Public Committee would be the head of government and in effect de facto Prime Minister of Siam. The role was offered and accepted by the 48-year-old former Minister of Justice, Privy Councillor and Middle Temple lawyer Phraya Manopakorn Nititada. His title was later changed to prime minister after the old title was deemed too communistic. Phraya Mano was considered at the time the least controversial choice for the post of prime minister due to his lack of conflict, his neutrality, and whose hands were deemed the "cleanest".

The Yellow Cover Dossier

The new People's Committee (or the government) was made up of 20 ministers of state, 10 of whom came from the People's Party while the 10 others (who were high ranking civil servants) were picked by the party. In truth the committee quickly turned dictatorial. On 15 March 1933 Dr. Pridi Phanomyong, one of the founding members of the People's Party, revolutionary, and member of the People's Committee and minister of state submitted to the People's Assembly the "Draft National Economic Plan" or the "Yellow Cover Dossier" (Thai: สมุดปกเหลือง).

The dossier outlined Pridi's plan for the country including the overhaul of the county's economic, financial, and social structure. This extremely ambitious plan would try to revise 700 years of feudalism in Siam. In his own words he wrote, "this change of administration is not merely a coup d'état but an economic revolution". In section 1 of the economic plan he wrote:

Dr. Pridi Panomyong as a scholar

"I remain resolute on this subject, and am of the view that if the government devises an appropriate national economic plan, finding employment for every citizen will not be beyond us. The improvement of the people's welfare is one of the primary goals in the reform of the system. Never was there an intention to transform the political system from a monarchy to an oligarchy, which would attempt to be a democracy in name only. I focused on the substance, namely, nourishing the welfare of the people. The constitution became the key to open the door of opportunity for the ordinary people to have a voice in the country's administration according to their needs and aspirations. Once this door has been opened, it is the duty of the government to lead the people through this door into a new land of prosperity."

Pridi tried to bring about this objective by suggesting many socialistic ideas, namely: national welfare, the redistribution of wealth and land to the poor, government guided economy, subsidies for rural farmers, a progressive taxation system, and social assurance and security for the poor. Pridi realised this and argued that these suggestions (socialistic as they were) were merely a means to try to raise the standard of living for the many rural poor. He further argued that:

"Those who read the economic plan with a negative frame of mind would conclude that the government's attempt to run the economic system would de-humanise peoples into animals...I took great caution to prevent such de-humanisation; on the contrary, my desire was to help make people more human by eliminating the dangers to personal welfare brought about by economic factors...."

Despite its socialist leanings the dossier nevertheless was in truth a mixture of both liberalism and socialism. For instance, the plan guarantees the right of private property (in sections 1 and 5). The plan also called for the establishment of an independent central bank, both components of the liberal economic system.

Backlash

The plan drew criticism immediately after it was published, including from newspapers, intellectuals stoked mostly by the urban elites, and landed nobility under the newly formed "Khana Chart" (Thai: คณะชาติ) (or National Party), looking for a way to damage the People's Party. The criticism centred on the socialistic nature of the dossier, including charges of communism and charges that Pridi was instigating a social revolution. The criticisms were also targeted at Phraya Mano, who allowed Pridi to publish such a plan. Despite these charges the People's Party and especially the young revolutionaries and most of the urban middle class and rural poor stood behind Pridi in his defence. The debate, exploded however into a constitutional crisis when King Prajadhipok, who had confessed to the nation that he had little knowledge of financial affairs, attacked Pridi verbally and asked whether Pridi copied his plans from Joseph Stalin or Stalin from Pridi's.

The controversial and harsh royal intervention drew even more outrage from the public, this time not directed at Pridi but at the king. For the monarch had violated the constitution and was in effect criticising his own constitutional government. This also led to a lawsuit by a Mr. Thawan Ritthidet, a civilian suing the monarch on the grounds he violated the constitution by interfering in political affairs.

Constitutional crisis and silent coup

The People's Committee was split between those who supported Pridi and those who opposed him, led by Phraya Mano himself. He by now had realised the danger of Pridi's plans. On one side were the revolutionaries and members of the People's Party, on the other were the civil servants and some elite members of the military (and former revolutionaries). They were Phraya Songsuradet, Phraya Ritthi Akhaney, and Phra Prasan Pithayayut. These men threatened Pridi and his supporters, by stating that they would carry weapons into the assembly. When Pridi did not attend the sessions they surrounded Pridi's house with armed supporters.

Phraya Mano had little choice and was forced to call for the dissolution of the People's Assembly on 1 April 1933. Under emergency decree some parts of the constitution, including the legislature and the judiciary, was suspended. On the 2 April, the government repealed the "Anti-Communist Act", which gave the police executive powers to arrest without trial, citizens who are considered to be communists. Under this law the People's Party was disbanded, The Communist Party of Siam's central committee was arrested as well as numerous others including Vietnamese exiles accused of having communist sympathies. Many left wing newspapers and publications were also suppressed. This event is called the "silent coup" (Thai: รัฐประหาร 1 เมษายน พ.ศ. 2476) and is considered by many Thai historians as the first "real" coup d'état instigated by the military in Thailand against a constitutional government. On 12 April Pridi was exiled to France.

The coup

Phraya Phahol, Second Prime Minister of Thailand

On 15 June, Army Colonel Phraya Phahol Pholphayuhasena (or Phot Phahonyothin), a member of the People's Party and a minister of state resigned from his seat on the People's Committee, citing health reasons. In fact he and Naval Commander Luang Supphachalasai, with the help of young military officers, conspired to overthrow Phraya Mano's government. With the support of the army, the navy, and the civilian factions within the People's Party and the support of most of Bangkok's populace, Phraya Phahol was able to act.

On 20 June Phraya Phahol and Luang Supachalasai, seized the National Assembly building and proclaiming themselves as the legitimate government. Citing the fact that the present government has acted illegally in dissolving the assembly and that they would return the constitution, which the previous administration had suspended. Phraya Phahol appointed himself the country's second prime minister and Luang Supachalasai a minister of state. He immediately recalled the People's Assembly and asked the Speaker to submit to King Prajadhipok at his Summer Palace in Hua Hin, the reasons behind the coup. The king duly accepted. He also pardoned Pridi and recalled him from exile.

Immediate resistance against the coup was limited and quickly dissolved as Phraya Mano resigned and escaped the capital by rail to Penang (then part of British Malaya), where he died in 1948. Phraya Songsuradet and others were barred from entering politics, this would eventually result in the Songsuradet Rebellion in 1939.

Aftermath and legacy

The coup was the first (many would follow in subsequent years) that was successfully instigated or led by the military against a civilian government. A legacy which still looms large over Thai politics today. However bloodless the coup was the start of a dictatorial regime worse than the one that it had replaced.

Pridi Phanomyong eventually returned to Siam on 29 September 1933, not returning to government immediately. He instead became an academic and founder of Thammasat University in 1934. He would eventually become one of the most important players in Thai history. During the Second World War he became Regent of Thailand (1944–1946) and Prime Minister of Thailand in 1946. However, the label of communist would never leave him. A Thai central bank, the Bank of Thailand was in the end founded in 1942, when Pridi was in government.

Many issues, chiefly those concerning the role of Prajadhipok, were however never resolved and would eventually lead to the Boworadet Rebellion later that year.

See also

References

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