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The boycott adds to concern that powerful forces allied with the opposition would try to scuttle an election that is otherwise likely to return Yingluck’s Puea Thai Party to power, and perpetuate the influence of her self-exiled brother, former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.
Chanting “Yingluck, get out”, thousands of whistle-blowing protesters gathered at locations around the city and set up stages in at least four places, bringing traffic to a halt at three main intersections and in two commercial districts.
Hundreds surrounded Yingluck’s house and demanded she quit. Yingluck, now caretaker premier, is not in Bangkok and has been visiting the northeast, her party’s stronghold.
The protest leader, Suthep Thaugsuban, a former Democrat heavyweight, wants a suspension of democracy and the installation of an appointed “people’s council”.
Yingluck and Thaksin remain hugely popular in the north and northeast, but Suthep’s movement is backed by a powerful minority - Bangkok’s middle class, bureaucrats, conservative elites and top army generals.
The Election Commission on Friday ruled out postponing the vote having earlier said it was concerned the polls could be marred by violence.
The politicised military, which has staged 18 coups since 1932, some successful, some failed, insists it is neutral, but many Thais suspect the allegiance of the generals, who removed Thaksin in a 2006 coup, is with the anti-government camp.