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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, February 26, 2014
The Arena of Written Questions in Parliament is Dominated by a few Gladiators
- Wednesday, 26 February 2014
There
are multiple mechanisms through which a parliamentarian can engage with
the house, to take forward his responsibility as a representative of
the people. But some of those opportunities are dominated by only a
very few.
Just 5 of the 225 MPs ask two-thirds of all the “written questions” in
Parliament: Manthri.lk is an online platform that allows activities of
MPs to be evaluated. According to its data, in the 16 months from 1 May
2012 to 31 August 2013, 952 written questions were asked in Parliament–
which means about 60 questions a month and 7 to 8 questions on each
sitting day of Parliament.
Of the total, 622 questions (two thirds!) – about 5 of the questions on
each day – come from the same few “gladiator” MPs that are dominating
the written questions arena in Parliament.
To explain another way, just 5 MPs (the “gladiators”) ask twice as many questions as all the other 220 MPs combined!
As shown in the figure, the five “gladiators” are all from the UNP.
(Manthri.lk has previously analysed parliamentary petitions, where
government MPs dominate).
The “gladiators” in order of “written questions” performance are: John
Amaratunga, BuddhikaPathirana, Ravi Karunanayake, DayasiriJayasekera and
Sajith Premadasa. (Jayasekera has now resigned his seat).
Purpose of the “Written Question” Method: The purpose of the mechanism of “written questions” is explained in section 29 (1) of the standing orders of Parliament: “The proper object of a question is to obtain information on a matter of fact within the special cognizance of the Minister to whom it is addressed or to urge that action be taken.”
Purpose of the “Written Question” Method: The purpose of the mechanism of “written questions” is explained in section 29 (1) of the standing orders of Parliament: “The proper object of a question is to obtain information on a matter of fact within the special cognizance of the Minister to whom it is addressed or to urge that action be taken.”
This comes under the section of “Public Business” in Parliament, where
an MP, acting on behalf of the public is able to present a case, elicit
information and urge action that is of interest to the public from the
relevant government ministers and the bureaucracy.
The Weakness of “Written Question” Method: The weakness is in the
process adopted by the standing orders. First, because thetime spent on
written questions on any given dayis limited to just half an hour (even
though in practice it is often an hour), not too many questions can be
dealt with properly on a given day; second, because the questions are
dealt with on a first-come, first-served basis (subject to a limit of
three questions a day from a single MP), a few MPs can easily clog up
the pipeline and dominate the system by filing a large number of
questions at once.
These weaknesses maybe something that members of Parliament should seek
to rectify by suitably amending the standing orders. But for now, the
“gladiators” of the “written questions” arena have shown how the system
can be used to maximum effect!