A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, October 1, 2017
Presidency: All options still on the table
Come 2020: Maithri, Ranil or Gota?
by Kumar David-September 30, 2017, 7:23 pm

Confucius say: "Even if people be made to follow right
path, how they be made to understand it?" –Analects.
path, how they be made to understand it?" –Analects.
The old codger saw the deficiencies of democracy ages ago. Hence there
is good reason why my previous columns dealt with unpredictability (17
September) and instability (24 September). We are nearing the end of
2017 and no one knows whether there will be a new constitution, whether
the Executive Presidency will be retained and what the electoral system
will be. The only two people (Ranil and Sirisena) who may have an
inkling, are tight lipped, or to be frank, I think they don’t know
either. The options are manifold: (a) constitution/no constitution, (b)
executive/semi-executive/non-executive presidency, (c) candidates
Maithri (who knows?), Ranil, Gota (dump US citizenship?), or a dark
horse. If you multiply the options, on paper there are 24. Conversation
among Colombo’s whisky sipping, chattering classes savours these themes;
lesser hoi polloi relish the topic relaxing on poya day playing
asking-hitting (booruwa). The deluge of options is too much for one
piece; so today’s offering is limited to just two matters; (a) assume
executive presidency is retained in 2020; (b) parliamentary election
outcome under any system.
These musings were kicked off by Rajan Philips’ much read and discussed
column three weeks ago ("The Hounds of Law Keep the UNP and the
Rajapaksas Nervous and Concerned" Sunday Island 10 September). I am
tempted to extend his offering and speculate: "Has Maithri loosened the
leash on commissions of inquiry, state prosecutors and commercial-crimes
cops and turn the screws on both Ranil and the Rajapaksas?" The first
uncertainty is could Maithri be playing this game at all. Probably not,
but if ‘yes’ there has to be a motive deeper than good governance. Were
he to throw Ranil to the wolves and lose the UNP, how can he govern? Say
he invites the Rajapaksa-SLFP into his fold and say they turn up at his
doorstep, he will still be short of a parliamentary majority. Perish
the thought of the TNA, Muslim parties or JVP playing ball. So if he
screws Ranil and the UNP, his game must to be to dissolve parliament at
the earliest that the constitution permits. Rather, I should state it
the other way; he will bide his time till then and roast Ranil and the
UNP after that. As I said I am unable to guess Maithri’s plan, but
Confucius say "A man cannot conceal himself for too long".
The fire-Ranil gambit is contingent on Maithri having made up his mind
to scuttle the new constitution – anodyne amendments excepted. He has
already shown himself a false friend of the constitution hence he faces
no psychological impediment, but he will fall foul of everybody to whom
he gave false promises – that is the whole nation except the
Rajapaksa-SLFP and now his SLFP. He will also be putting his neck in a
Rajapaksa noose; dare he? Surely he is too cunning to play suicide
games. Either way, now or in a year, the fire-Ranil gambit seems (to me)
to be a dead end for Maithri; but let’s not write it off entirely;
there may be dervish options I cannot fathom (unknown-unknowns).
Presidential options
Let’s move on and talk about presidential options if the executive
presidency is not abolished by 2020. I will try to put aversions and
preferences aside and clinically diagnose possible outcomes. I am making
an effort to be as objective as I can in the context of prevailing
uncertainties in evaluating likely outcomes. Confucius say "The cautious
seldom err".
Ok then, there is the three candidate case and the two candidate cases
(one of the three backs the third). A three cornered fight will be a
walk over for Ranil who is confident of a 28% to 30% minority-vote –
leeway to allow for Sinhala Catholic-Christian fluidity. Then even if a
quarter of the Sinhala-Buddhist vote sees him in the high 40s while the
other two battle to divide say 55%. It will be difficult for Gota to
press Maithri’s vote below 10%, though the latter will be third in a
three-cornered contest. This case was easy to forecast (known-known).
More interesting are the possible one-to-one combats; Ranil backed by
Maithri versus Gota; Maithri sponsored by Ranil against Gota; and option
three, Gota with Maithri versus Ranil. I insist Gota cannot do better
than Mahinda-2015 (inability to abuse state power and no minority
support). To my numerically-challenged pseudo-Marxist critics I say,
this is true arithmetically, algebraically or even if you have the
aptitude for the vector calculus. It’s a known-known; Confucius say:
"Those who know nothing never risk being misunderstood".
A repeat of the 2015 arrangement won’t go down well with the UNP. I am a
cynic, I think Maithri will like it, but it will be ‘no-no’ for the UNP
base. Maithri as a ceremonial token is a non-issue, so no more about
that. In any case this is irrelevant to the
‘Executive-Presidency-retained’ case.
The final challenging option is if Maithri cuts loose from the
Ranil-Chandrika-JVP-JHU umbilical cord and throws his weight behind a
unified-SLFP sponsored candidate Gota. Then the political scenario will
look like this. The UNP is tainted by corruption, Ranil though not
personally dishonest tarnished by blunders and bad judgement in
appointments, the new constitution not enacted, and the economy in poor
shape. Against this backdrop can Ranil pull it off against Gota?
I said clinical objectivity and not forgetting this, I think the 30%
minority-community handicap that anyone starts off with against Gota,
cannot be neutralised. If a strong non-Rajapaksa, specifically not-Gota,
SLFP candidates is found he/she will do better. Something of a
known-unknown. Juggling a discredited crony Tamil ex-diplomat, a
cross-decorated Judas and an unheard of Muslim nobody on the Eliya
platform will not seduce minority voters. Anecdotal feedback suggests
that this caper on the Eliya stage has been counterproductive because
the exhibits were implausible.
Parliamentary options
How will the various combinations fare in the tussle for seats in
parliament? If there is a change to the electoral style (say 150
first-past-the-post constituencies and 75 proportional) it will be good
nationally, but that matter is different from what I wish to say next.
Whatever the alternatives in format and even if there is no change in
format and the current all-proportional system is retained, it will not
make a significant difference to the number of seats that the big three
(UNP, Rajapaksa-SLFP and Maithri-SLFP) take home in a three-cornered
fight. Furthermore, conventional logic says the UNP will be at an
advantage in a three-cornered fight and I can’t think of why
conventional logic could be incorrect. If a tactical voting agreement
materialises between the UNP and Maithri-SLFP it will leave the
Rajapaksa-SLFP led JO well short of a parliamentary majority. Let me
repeat that these forecasts hold irrespective of whether the electoral
architecture is changed or not.
The case where Maithri-SLFP and Rajapaksa-SLFP unify and take on the UNP
is clearly the more complex case and my judgement is that the UNP will
come off second best in this case. Mostly the reason is that Ranil and
the UNP will be seen to have failed in controlling corruption,
prosecuting previous corruption and most important the blame for the
failure on the economic front will be laid squarely on Ranil’s
shoulders; and that’s fair since the President has, most of the time,
let the Prime Minister take charge of economic issues.
This brings me to a curious matter. I maintain that Gota is a dead duck
for the presidency, but a unified SLFP (Maithri plus Rajapaksa wings)
will collect more seats in Sinhalese areas than the UNP. The minority
vote in the North and East will go to Tamil and Muslim parties. Thus the
opposition is better off jettisoning the Executive Presidency, which it
is unlikely to secure, and supporting a new constitution with or
without revised electoral architecture. The idiocy of the opposition,
for which I am thankful, is magnified by its inability to comprehend
that it is better off NOT salivating for an unreachable executive
presidency and instead focussing on parliament.
The reason for the idiocy is obvious enough. It is so obsessed with
racism that it sees a Tiger behind every palmyrah plant and in an
executive presidency it sees a Sinhala autocrat willing to subdue every
form of Tamil dissent. Hence it cuts its nose to spite its face. Sun Tse
say: "Never interrupt enemy when he is making mistake" – Art of War. So
me happy if they keep making mistake.
Finally a few words about Burman religious bigotry and the massacre of
Muslims; another example of narrow chauvinism. Amnesty released
satellite images of an "orchestrated campaign" to burn Rohingya villages
and evidence of security forces pushing Muslims out of the country.
400,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since violence began last
month. They have long been persecuted in Burma as "illegal immigrants"
(remember upcountry Tamils were kalla-thonis till recently); denied
citizenship though they have lived in Burma for generations, and their
villages emptied (Sirima-Shastri Pact). Confucius reminds: "Before
embarking on journey of revenge, dig two graves".
The majority Burman population has no sympathy for Rohingyas, calls the
Muslims terrorists (Liberation Tigers of Islamic Rohinyga!) and wants
them evicted from the country. The army claims it is fighting
terrorists, denies targeting civilians and says jihadists infiltrated
communities and burnt down the villages. The BBC’s Jonathan Head who was
in a group of reporters chaperoned by the army reported that villagers
uniformly stated that rape and burnings were not done by the army; but
officers always monitored the interviews. (Confucius would have said: "I
didn’t say all this shit").
Burma is going the way of Lanka and Aung San Su Ki, (learning from
Sirisena?) is a shield against criticism of the army. Her immense moral
authority could have impacted public opinion but she has chosen not to
use it. She is afraid of an angry reaction from Buddhist nationalists
just like our leaders ever since the 1950s. Maybe she fears the military
may step in. Buddhist will support a coup if she angers them. Confucius
say: "To see the right and not to do it is cowardice".

