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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, January 23, 2018
Coping with the primacy of power politics

By Jehan Perera-January 22, 2018, 8:29 pm
President
Maithripala Sirisena’s application to the Supreme Court to obtain its
opinion on the length of his term came as a surprise to the general
public, and evidently to most in the government. The bid for an extended
term was generally viewed as a violation of his commitments, due to the
19th Amendment, which reduced the presidential term from six to five
years, being passed with his approval. However, the presidency is the
main source of the SLFP’s power within the government. Therefore
preserving the presidency is a political necessity to the SLFP and needs
to be seen as such. The Supreme Court opinion that the president’s term
will be five years against six years was a blow to the President and to
the SLFP. It has highlighted the fact that the president can only give
his strength to the SLFP membership for less than two years as
presidential elections will now fall due in 2019.
A Supreme Court opinion that the President had a six-year term rather
than a five year term would have given a bigger incentive to voters to
vote for the SLFP rather than for another party. A six-year term for
Maithripala Sirisena would have meant that SLFP MPs would face elections
before him. This would make his support for individual MPs critical,
including for the process of securing nominations from within the party.
A six-year term would also place the UNP at a disadvantage, competing
against an SLFP that enjoyed the support of a sitting president. The
President’s adherence to constitutional norms in soliciting the Supreme
Court advisory opinion, and accepting it without protest, is a positive
signal to the country at large about the prevalence of the Rule of Law
under the present government.
However, the downside of these political maneuverings is that power
politics is at the centre stage. This is not what the majority of people
hoped for when they voted for a change at the presidential and general
elections of 2015. President Sirisena, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and
other government leaders all pledged to ensure good governance and
non-corruption as their primary goals, which would facilitate both
economic development and national reconciliation. However, the evidence
from the Bond Commission report is that within a few weeks of coming to
power, some of the government leaders were involved in the bond scam
which was not an expression of the anticipated new political culture.
Likewise President Sirisena looking to extend his term of office was not
an expression of the promised new political culture, but a reflection
of power politics.
PRAGMATIC POLITICS
One of the unintended outcomes of the open tension between President
Maitripala Sirisena and members of the UNP is to divert public attention
away from the opposition and to internal conflict within the government
in the run up to the local government elections. The submission of the
report of the presidential commission appointed to investigate the
Central Bank bond scam has given the President an opportunity to
strengthen his hand. It has also given rise to the perception within the
UNP that their members are being targeted by the President and the
SLFP. This was followed by President Sirisena asking the Supreme Court
for an advisory opinion on whether his term of office was five years or
six. The tussle between the UNP and SLFP members on these issues has
taken the centre stage of public interest, thereby reducing the
publicity for the SLPP which is out of the main frame.
In keeping with the adage that to politicians, bad publicity is better
than no publicity, the UNP-SLFP tussle on this issue has enabled the
SLFP to demonstrate to the general public that it is a power to reckon
with in the government. In the aftermath of the Supreme Court opinion,
leading members of the SLFP are claiming that President Sirisena will
contest presidential elections a second time. This is in order to
impress the voters that the president will continue to remain in power
for the foreseeable future. The suggestion is made that therefore voting
for the SLFP at the local government elections will ensure access to
governmental patronage for the foreseeable future. In addition, the
president has stated that after the elections he will take control over
the economy through the device of the National Economic Commission.
So far the Prime Minister has been making an appearance of going along
with the President. The UNP did not challenge his decision to seek the
opinion of the Supreme Court on the length of his term of office. It is
reported that this inquiry of the President was made without the
knowledge of the UNP or the Prime Minister. The UNP probably sees the
President’s statement that he will take control of the economy after the
elections as part of his election campaign to persuade the SLFP’s
traditional voters to vote SLFP rather than for the SLPP. In response to
the President taking offence at the various statements made against him
on public platforms by members of the UNP, the Prime Minister is
reported to have admonished his party members to desist from public
criticism of the President.
PROBLEM SOLVING
In this complex context the positive feature is that Sri Lanka continues
to have a government of national unity comprising the two largest
political parties, the UNP and SLFP. As can be expected the forthcoming
local government elections have aggravated the tensions between them. It
is customary that those who seek to win an election engage in boosting
their own images and running down their rivals. At the same time it is
necessary to value the check and balance function that having two
parties in power brings to the government in tackling national issues.
The exposure of the Central Bank bond scam is a relevant example. If it
has been left to one party in governance, then neither the scam nor its
magnitude would have seen the light of day.
It is also necessary for the two parties to work together to bring
resolution to the country’s protracted ethnic conflict rather than to
continue to drift without engaging in serious problem solving of
difficult and controversial issues. The political stresses of the
present must not stand in the way of future cooperation. Previous
efforts to find a solution floundered on the rocks of narrow political
partisanship. The resumption of both the constitutional reform and
transitional justice processes after the conclusion of the local
government elections will be a bipartisan national task.
The forthcoming election will give an indication of the level of support
for the ruling parties on the one hand and for the opposition on the
other hand. It will be important for the parties in the government
coalition to obtain majority popular support in order to have the
confidence to forge ahead with the plans they have already laid out for
national level problem solving. A situation where the local government
election yields an outcome in which the UNP and SLFP have to cooperate
in order to secure the majority in each of the local government
authorities would take the policy of bipartisanship down to the
community level, which will be the best formula for building grassroots
support for national problem solving on controversial issues.
