Domestic Developments
The Geneva agreement also stipulated that general elections should be         held in Cambodia during 1955 and that the International Control         Commission should monitor them to ensure fairness. Sihanouk was more         determined than ever to defeat the Democrats (who, on the basis of their         past record, were expected to win the election). The king attempted         unsuccessfully to have the constitution amended. On March 2, 1955, he         announced his abdication in favor of his father, Norodom Suramarit.         Assuming the title of samdech (prince), Sihanouk explained that         this action was necessary in order to give him a free hand to engage in         politics.         
To challenge the Democrats, Prince Sihanouk established his own         political machine, the oddly named Sangkum Reastr Niyum (Popular         Socialist Community), commonly referred to as the Sangkum. The name is         odd because its most important components were right-wing parties that         were virulently anticommunist. The Sangkum's emergence in early 1955         unified most right-wing groups under the prince's auspices. In the         September election, Sihanouk's new party decisively defeated the         Democrats, the Khmer Independence Party of Son Ngoc Thanh, and the         leftist Pracheachon (Citizens') Party, winning 83 percent of the vote         and all of the seats in the National Assembly.         
Khmer nationalism, loyalty to the monarch, struggle  against injustice         and corruption, and protection of the Buddhist religion were  major         themes in Sangkum ideology. The party adopted a particularly         conservative interpretation of Buddhism, common in the Theravada         countries of Southeast Asia, that the social and economic  inequalities         among people were legitimate because of the workings of karma.  For the poorer classes, virtuous and obedient conduct opened         up the possibility of being born into a higher station in a  future life.         The appeal to religion won the allegiance of the country's many  Buddhist         priests, who were a particularly influential group in rural  villages.         
As the 1960s began, organized political opposition to Sihanouk and         the Sangkum virtually had disappeared. According to Vickery, the         Democratic Party disbanded in 1957 after its leaders--who had been         beaten by soldiers--requested the privilege of joining the Sangkum.         
Despite its defense of the status quo, especially the interests of         rural elites, the Sangkum was not an exclusively right-wing         organization. Sihanouk included a number of leftists in his party and         government. Among these were future leaders of the Khmer Rouge. Hu Nim         and Hou Yuon served in several ministries between 1958 and 1963, and         Khieu Samphan served briefly as secretary of state for commerce in 1963.         
Sihanouk's attitude toward the left was paradoxical. He often         declared that if he had not been a prince, he would have become a         revolutionary. Sihanouk's chronic suspicion of United States intentions         in the region, his perception of revolutionary China as Cambodia's most         valuable ally, his respect for such prominent and capable leftists as         Hou, Hu, and Khieu, and his vague notions of "royal socialism"         all impelled him to experiment with socialist policies. In 1963 the         prince announced the nationalization of banking, foreign trade, and         insurance as a means of reducing foreign control of the economy. In 1964         a state trading company, the National Export-Import Corporation, was         established to handle foreign commerce. The declared purposes of         nationalization were to give Khmer nationals, rather than Chinese or         Vietnamese, a greater role in the nation's trade, to eliminate middlemen         and to conserve foreign exchange through the limiting of unnecessary         luxury imports. As a result of this policy, foreign investment quickly         disappeared, and a kind of "crony socialism" emerged somewhat         similar to the "crony capitalism" that evolved in the         Philippines under President Ferdinand Marcos. Lucrative state monopolies         were parceled out to Sihanouk's most loyal retainers, who         "milked" them for cash.         
Sihanouk was headed steadily for a collision with the right. To         counter charges of one-man rule, the prince declared that he would         relinquish control of candidate selection and would permit more than one         Sangkum candidate to run for each seat in the September 1966 National         Assembly election. The returns showed a surprising upsurge in the         conservative vote at the expense of more moderate and left-wing         elements, although Hou, Hu, and Khieu were reelected by their         constituencies. General Lon Nol became prime minister.         
Out of concern that the right wing might cause an irreparable split         within the Sangkum and might challenge his domination of the political         system, Sihanouk set up a "counter government" (like the         British "shadow cabinet") packed with his most loyal personal         followers and with leading leftists, hoping that it would exert a         restraining influence on Lon Nol. Leftists accused the general of being         groomed by Western intelligence agencies to lead a bloody anticommunist         coup d'état similar to that of General Soeharto in Indonesia. Injured         in an automobile accident, Lon Nol resigned in April 1967. Sihanouk         replaced him with a trusted centrist, Son Sann. This was the         twenty-third successive Sangkum cabinet and government to have been         appointed by Sihanouk since the party was formed in 1955.

