BANGKOK, Thailand, Oct. 2, 2008

Thai Sex Tycoon Spices Up Political Scene

Former Brothel Owner-Turned-Corruption Crusader Relishes Underdog Role In Governor Race

  • Before Chuwit Kamolvisit became a crusader against corruption, he employed some 1,300 women in a string of brothels thinly disguised as massage parlors.

    Before Chuwit Kamolvisit became a crusader against corruption, he employed some 1,300 women in a string of brothels thinly disguised as massage parlors.  (AP Photo/David Longstreath)

  • Fast Facts Thailand

    Learn about the people, economy and history.

(AP)  The one-time sex tycoon who would be governor wants to clean up this sprawling, gritty city where he grew rich overseeing an empire of flesh. But weeks of shaking hands and giving speeches have left him longing for the days of massage girls and hot tubs.

"Politics is so dirty, so ugly," Chuwit Kamolvisit sighs. "I would rather sit tight in the nightclub, surrounded by girls, smoking cigars, drinking brandy, champagne. That was the perfect life."

But that life ended, thanks to a series of scandals that made him a celebrity. Now, Chuwit is an underdog candidate in Bangkok's governor race, financing his own campaign to take on what he sees as the hypocrisy and deceit rotting Thai politics.

Who better to wipe out bribes, he argues, than the former king of sleaze who got rich paying them?

"I tell the truth," Chuwit, 47, said in an interview, reeling off a list of issues from graft to traffic to unemployment. "If you want to listen to the truth, you listen to me."

Judging from recent polls, however, most people are not impressed by what they hear. Chuwit is running a distant second, trailing the leading candidate by as much as 30 percentage points. Chuwit, who now owns a boutique Bangkok hotel, gets attention wherever he goes, but few expect him to garner enough votes to win on Oct. 5.

On Thursday, three days ahead of the vote, Chuwit elbowed a newscaster in the face and then kicked him when he fell to the ground. Chuwit was being interviewed by the Channel 3 reporter in the network's studio and erupted after the taping ended, saying the reporter made him look bad by asking confrontational questions.

"A man like me, you can kill him but you can't insult him," he said during a press conference following the incident. "I apologized for what I did ... but I had to do it. I haven't done anything like this in over 30 years."

Before Chuwit became a crusader against corruption, he employed some 1,300 women in a string of brothels thinly disguised as massage parlors named Victoria's Secret, Emmanuelle and Honolulu. Prostitution is illegal in Thailand but widespread and rarely prosecuted.

He became a local hero in 2004 when he exposed corruption in the unpopular police force by listing the bribes he paid to senior officers - Rolex watches, free services and, he said recently, "money in a garbage bag because it was too much for an envelope."

He says he made one million baht - the equivalent of $30,000 - each night from the massage parlors and he went public only because the police failed to protect him when he ran into his own legal troubles.

Quote

The sex business is not a problem. If you don't have sex, that's a problem.

Chuwit Kamolvisit
Chuwit sold the parlors and rode his popularity to a strong but unsuccessful finish in the last governor's race. This year, farther from the scandal and tougher from the political loss, he is pouring his personal fortune into a new and, he says, final bid for governor.

The front-runner is Apirak Kosayodhin, a former mobile phone executive running for re-election after completing a four-year term last month.

Apirak has few signature accomplishments from his first term, but he is the kind of well-educated, competent professional usually favored by Bangkok voters and is backed by the well-established Democrat Party.

The election's big issues are familiar ones in this city of more than 6 million: traffic, pollution, schools. They're tough to tackle from City Hall because the governor - the official title of the city's top elected post - has restricted power as the central government controls the funds needed for most essential services.

A tireless man with a thin mustache and a square jaw, Chuwit, always quick with one-liners, is honest about his limitations: "I cannot fix the traffic. Nobody can fix the traffic."

But he promises to fight government stasis and instead of kissing babies he has adopted an angry man persona. His campy posters show him glowering over a pair of binoculars meant to suggest a penetrating gaze.

Analysts admire his showman bravado but are skeptical about his chances as Thailand seeks to recover from a turbulent national political crisis.

"Chuwit's aggressive campaign has caught public attention, but I'm not sure voters would like to see more conflict," said Panithan Wattanayagorn, a political analyst from Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University.

Around Bangkok's main business district, some voters said they disliked Chuwit because of his controversial past, but others said he fit well in the dirty business of Thai politics.

"I believe that no Thai politician is clean," said Tam Sompon, 40, browsing through golf clubs at a sport shop. "A good background doesn't guarantee that a candidate won't be corrupt in office. I will vote for Chuwit because he can work for us swiftly and aggressively."

There are concerns that Chuwit is perhaps too comfortable in the economy's "gray areas" to trust with a seat like the governor's but Chuwit says his years as a marketer of sleaze were successful enough that he doesn't need to become a sleazy politician.

As for those who disapprove of his years in the hot tubs, Chuwit shrugs.

"The sex business is not a problem," he said. "If you don't have sex, that's a problem."

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by rushman71 October 3, 2008 6:54 PM EDT
patriotic9: Words spoken from a true shrub!!! Get a life, ******!!! Oh, and by the way.....Jesus loves you!!!
Reply to this comment
by patriotic9 October 2, 2008 7:08 PM EDT
The *** business is not a problem. If you don''t have ***, that''s a problem.

Chuwit Kamolvisit

I totally agree with him on that!
Reply to this comment
by patriotic9 October 2, 2008 7:06 PM EDT
I second CultureChang s post at 11:25 AM. Journalistic ignorance abounds regarding Thailand.

Thailand is easily one of the nicest countries and cultures on our planet. The Thai people are friendly, polite and most hospitable.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by jMcGilvray at 11:50 AM : Oct 02, 2008

Is Michael Jackson from Thailand?
Reply to this comment
by patriotic9 October 2, 2008 7:05 PM EDT
The forcible, sexual rape of a child is a felony. Cambodia and Thailand have a high frequency of the crime. Those countries should stress religion, not alcoholism. This move would put an end to illicit pornography.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by Petro49L at 12:09 PM : Oct 02, 2008

Yeah right! They should stress religion like those God-loving, Holy Conservative Christians who play THE FATHER, THE SON and THE HOLY SPIRIT in the same churches where they oppose Homosexuals'' right of marriage ( The holy, god-loving, conservative christian man is "THE FATHER", that young innocent little boy whose pant is pulled down in the name of god is "THE SON" and what is inserted in the BACK HOLE of that young boy in the name of JESUS is "THE HOLY SPIRIT".
Reply to this comment
by questionnews October 2, 2008 6:33 PM EDT
Former Ho dealer running to be top pimp in "Bangkok"

It doesn''t get much more ironic than that.
Reply to this comment
by antoniof123 October 2, 2008 4:52 PM EDT
He should move to America and become a politician here.. he would fit right in..

Posted by FREEDOMBIKER at 11:23 AM : Oct 02, 2008

LOL.....
Reply to this comment
by petro49l October 2, 2008 3:09 PM EDT
The forcible, sexual rape of a child is a felony. Cambodia and Thailand have a high frequency of the crime. Those countries should stress religion, not alcoholism. This move would put an end to illicit pornography.
Reply to this comment
by culturechang October 2, 2008 2:29 PM EDT
To get elected in Bangkok, you must promise to fix the traffic problems. That is all they care about. Its like the Chicago mayor position. Plow the snow off the streets in the winter or get thrown out of office at the next election.
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

  • MOST POPULAR
Discussed
  1. House Passes Landmark Health Care Bill

    (478 recent comments)

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: