Kem Sokha, deputy leader of the Cambodia National Rescue Party,
yesterday urged supporters not to leave the party in favour of smaller
opposition groups if they want a chance of changing the ruling party at
the next election.
Speaking to hundreds of members and supporters in Phnom Penh’s Thmar
Koul village, Sokha said the party must stand united if it is to win the
2018 national election.
“Do not break our forces; do not break our spirit to argue with this
one or that one,” he said. “I would like to call for us to meet on only
one battlefield [so we can] win to lead the country in the upcoming
election.”
In his remarks, Sokha told supporters to steer clear of grassroots
political aspirant Kem Ley, League for Democracy Party leader Khim
Veasna, and Mam Sonando, who recently revived his Beehive Social
Democratic Party.
“If we turn to Sonando a little bit, Kem Ley a little bit, Khim
Veasna a little bit . . . forget a big battlefield, [we] would lose one
more time,” he said.
The CNRP saw considerable gains in the 2013 national election, winning 55 of the National Assembly’s 123 seats.
But, Sokha said, if dozens more opposition parties are created before
the 2018 election and the CNRP’s members do not remain loyal, it will
be impossible to take power from the Cambodian People’s Party.
Sonando, however, said yesterday that people are losing confidence in the CNRP.
“I do not pay attention to Kem Sokha or Sam Rainsy. I am paying attention to people’s needs,” he added.
Political analyst Ou Virak said CNRP supporters were likely to remain loyal for the upcoming election.
“I think it’s a given that it will be a two-party race in 2018,” he
said. But, he added, if the CNRP is unable to gain the seats needed to
take power in 2018, its future beyond that looks bleak.
“I don’t think the CNRP, as it is today, could continue,” he said,
explaining that support for the party would likely drop and divisions
heighten.
CPP spokesman Sok Eysan said his party was confident it will win the
next election with a simple strategy of “making people happy”.
“If we do good deeds people will support and vote for us,” he said.
Meanwhile, in his speech yesterday, Sokha said he hopes to see a CNRP
governor in Phnom Penh in the future. He announced plans for a congress
in 2017 to reform the voting system in the hopes of making this happen.
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