Thailand has been under army rule since a 2014 putsch toppled an elected government and installed the country's most autocratic regime in a generation.
The generals have banned all political activity and repeatedly postponed a promised return to democracy. Yet this week the junta chief vowed polls would be held no later than February 2019.
In an early sign of enthusiasm for the vote, dozens of new parties applied for registration at the Election Commission (EC) today, under names like "Siam Democrat Party" and "Thai Unity Party."
Many were political novices with backgrounds in business, civil society or academia, plus several farmers from the north and south.
A YouTube celebrity was also among the crowd, while one group wore T-shirts with the faces of Thailand's most bitter political rivals arranged in a heart under the words "United".
The agency has 30 days to approve or reject the bids.
Thailand's caustic political scene has been dominated for over a decade two main factions: the Democrat Party and various incarnations of Pheu Thai -- a populist movement headed by exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.
Yet their governments have been repeatedly knocked from power by coups and court rulings favoured by a Bangkok-based, military-allied elite.
Analysts say the ruling junta is determined to curb Pheu Thai's influence in the next poll and has rewritten a charter that hampers larger parties and shrinks the clout of elected politicians.
The military regime has yet to lift its ban on political organising or protests of any kind.
Even if held as promised, the 2019 vote will not restore the level of democracy Thailand enjoyed before the coup.
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