The current political pattern is party system. It is best understood in the context of a protracted political crisis, which has seen the struggle for power between those who represent the interests of the royalists, the military and the Bangkok elite, and those who work for the rural poor in remote regions of Thailand. Thai political parties, as many analysts view, (dispose of the future,)—needs further translation review seeing them as marginalized political entities whose existence has only been made possible by the whims of the ruling power of the day. Therefore, the “ThaiRak Thai Party,” (TRT) led by Thaksin Shinawatra, has set a new precedent in Thai politics. It willingly challenged the power of the traditional elite, and lent its mode of operation and its ideology to a new generation of political parties. In the Thai political scene the ongoing battle between two political factions has encouraged a new trend, that is, a gradual move toward a two–party system. This trend is increasingly clearer with the birth of the new political party, led by the yellow–clad royalists previously known as the People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD), and the highly organized red-shirted movement with its pro-poor agenda and the potential to be transformed soon into a legitimate political party.