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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, November 25, 2013
Ministers and ministers
Editorial-November 24, 2013, 8:31 pm
It is a mistake for a political party to field the family members of its
elected representatives at elections in that the contestants benefit
from its existing vote bank without delivering new votes as such. If
Candidate A is a brother of Minister B, A usually wins with B’s votes.
Former NCP Chief Minister Bertie Premalal Dissanayake was disappointed
that he was not reappointed CM after the UPFA’s victory last year and
the government may have sought to prevent him from raising objections to
Ranjith being appointed CM by getting Chandrasena to resign as a
Cabinet minister. Dissanayake died a few weeks ago and Chandrasena must
have got himself reappointed. There is no one to make an issue of his
appointment to the Cabinet today. But, what has become of the
government’s much-advertised policy that two brothers cannot hold
ministerial posts? Logically, the NCP Chief Minister has to resign now.
However, we are not so naïve as to expect him to do so.
The government, a wag says, hasn’t been fair by the handful of its
parliamentarians who are not either Cabinet ministers or deputy
ministers; it should go the whole hog and appoint all of them ministers.
Now that we have a ministry for sugar, of all things, we should have
separate ministries for rice, parippu, hominy, public conveniences,
bullock carts and the like—we almost forgot the ideologically important
kurakkan or finger millet, most of which is currently imported. If the
number of government MPs is not enough for that purpose, let more
Opposition members be lured into decamping and appointed ministers. (The
new Cabinet, the wag says, could meet at the refurbished BMICH!)
Joking aside, it is regrettable that the government does not care two
hoots about the colossal amount of public funds an ever expanding
Cabinet gobbles up. Besides, we already have ministerial nitwits causing
mayhem on public roads with their huge security contingents, and
turning everything they lay their dirty hands on into a mess.
It may be that President Rajapaksa wants to assuage the resentment of
party seniors who feel let down, by making them ministers, to prevent
the disintegration of his government. The increasing size of Cabinets
has also been blamed on coalition politics which has come to stay. All
signs are that future governments will have to follow suit to remain in
power. One way of overcoming this problem may be to amend the
Constitution to prevent crossovers being appointed ministers and
prescribe the number of ministers as in provincial councils. Political
parties could formulate their own criteria for ministerial appointments
with special emphasis on educational qualifications, efficiency,
integrity etc so that dullards with king-sized egos could be left out.
However, we know, that’s easier said than done!