Protesters are on the streets of Bangkok for a second day, amid tensions between rival political camps.
Crowds opposed to the administration of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra gathered in the Thai capital on Sunday for the largest rally in several years.
Organisers said the protesters would march to several areas of Bangkok on Monday, including media outlets.
The protests have been triggered by a controversial government-backed political amnesty bill.
The legislation, which the opposition say would have allowed ousted leader Thaksin Shinawatra - the current prime minister's brother - to return to Thailand without serving a jail sentence for corruption, failed to pass in the Senate earlier this month.
But the proposed legislation led to an fresh outbreak of street protests, reigniting simmering political divisions and raising the spectre of renewed political turmoil in the South East Asian nation.
'Calls the shots'
On Monday the anti-government protesters, who are led by an opposition Democratic Party lawmaker, planned to march to state offices, military headquarters and television stations, the Bangkok Post reported.
Thailand's troubles Sept 2006: Army overthrows government of Thaksin Shinawatra, rewrites constitution Dec 2007: Pro-Thaksin People Power Party wins most votes in election Aug 2008: Mr Thaksin flees into exile before end of corruption trial Dec 2008: Mass yellow-shirt protests paralyse Bangkok; Constitutional Court bans People Power Party; Abhisit Vejjajiva comes to power Mar-May 2010: Thousands of pro-Thaksin red shirts occupy parts of Bangkok; eventually cleared by army; dozens killed July 2011: Yingluck Shinawatra leads Pheu Thai party to general election win
Sunday's demonstration drew an estimated 100,000 people, who called on the government to step down.
'We have stood by silently while her [PM Yingluck Shinawatra's] brother calls the shots and she runs the country into the ground with loss-making policies,' Reuters news agency quoted protester Suwang Ruangchai, 54, as saying.
About 40,000 government supporters held a separate rally in another part of the capital on Sunday.
Thailand has been bitterly divided since Mr Thaksin was ousted in a military coup in 2006.
Groups opposed to him occupied Bangkok's main airport in 2008, shutting it down. Then in 2010, those who backed him and his allies held two months of street protests that paralysed Bangkok.
Those demonstrations ended in a military crackdown. More than 90 people - mostly civilian protesters - died over the course of the two-month sit-in.
A government led by Mr Thaksin's sister was subsequently elected and since then Thailand has remained relatively politically stable.
But the opposition accuse Mr Thaksin of running the government from self-imposed exile overseas, and the now-shelved amnesty bill has served as a spark for renewed protests.
The bill applied to offences committed during the upheaval after Mr Thaksin was removed from office. Ms Yingluck's government had argued that the legislation was a necessary step towards reconciliation.
But critics said it would allow human rights abuses - such as the killing of civilian protesters - to go unpunished.
And the opposition viewed it as a way of overturning the jail sentence given to Mr Thaksin, paving the way for his return.
Thaksin Shinawatra is a deeply polarising figure in Thai politics.
He drew huge support from Thailand's rural poor but strong opposition from other sectors in society, and the divisions dating from the 2006 coup continue to dominate the political landscape.
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