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, May 1, 2018
Comprehensive constitutional change is the better option
By Jehan Perera-April 30, 2018, 12:00 pm
The
political debate on the proposed 20th Amendment needs to be considered
in the national perspective. The JVP’s proposed amendment is intended to
abolish the popularly elected executive presidency and replace it with a
significantly less powerful presidency to be elected by parliament
rather than by the people. Those in the political opposition are
currently the most vocal in their opposition to the proposed amendment.
Those on the government side have been more or less silent so far.
An exception has been government minister Mano Ganesan who heads the
Tamil Progressive Alliance. He has said that his party which is part of
the government alliance will not support the amendment. Over the past
decades, it has been the view of the ethnic minority parties that the
popularly elected executive presidency is better for them. It is an
elected office where their votes count, and those who seek to be elected
as president have to accommodate the ethnic minority positions.
The issue of the executive presidency is an ongoing subject of
negotiation within the government coalition. At the level of policy, the
main argument against it is that it is too powerful an institution and
has been abused in the past. But there is also powerful opinion in
favour of it. This is that unless the country has a single center of
power, the devolution of power will lead to divisive tendencies that the
system will be unable to check. The ethnic minorities too seem to
prefer the continuation of the executive presidency as they see in it as
a central institution that they can impact on directly through their
vote.
So far no opinion on the subject has been expressed by other senior
members of the government. The likely scenario is that there are
calculations being made regarding the advantages and disadvantages of
the abolition of the elected executive presidency to themselves and to
their political parties. Invariably many of those who are leaders of the
government and opposition would see themselves as potential
presidential material.
NATIONAL INTEREST
When contemplating changes in the fundamental law of the country, which
is what constitutional change is about, it is important that the long
term and best interests of the country be looked at rather than the
interests of individuals and their political parties. The problem with
competitive party politics is that ambitious politicians tend to look at
the short term and what is in their own interests. The danger is that
public opinion will follow suit.
JVP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake who proposed to bring the 20th
Amendment as a Private Member’s Motion is reported to have said the
president would be appointed by parliament under the proposed 20th
Amendment. He said that according to the draft amendment, the president
would continue to be the head of state and the commander-in-chief of the
armed forces, but he would no longer be the head of the government and
the head of the cabinet of ministers.
The executive presidency is the single most powerful in the current
scheme of governance. The president is the head of state, the head of
government, the head of the cabinet of ministers and the
commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The entire design of the 1978
constitution which established it, and in which it is embedded, is based
on the central pillar of the presidency. Therefore, the excision of the
presidency will have a major impact on the strength of the rest of the
constitutional architecture.
According to the JVP leader the president’s powers are to be distributed
among the cabinet, prime minister, constitutional council and
independent commissions. However, the president would continue to have
the powers of appointing governors of the provinces in the same manner
as in the 13th Amendment. Opposing the move, SLFP Minister Nimal
Siripala de Silva has said the powers of the executive presidency are
vested in many areas of the constitution. He said, "If they do abolish
it, they will have to bring in at least another 2,000 provisions in its
place."
POTENTIAL INSTABILITY
A key feature of the proposed 20th Amendment is to transfer the powers
of the directly elected president to the prime minister who is the
person who commands the confidence of the majority in parliament. The
recent vote of no-confidence in the prime minister shows that the prime
minister’s position, unlike that of the president, is not a guaranteed
one. The prime minister can be removed early in his or her term. On this
occasion the prime minister survived the vote of no-confidence against
him. On another occasion he might not.
By way of contrast, in terms of the present constitution, the president
is virtually unassailable, and immune to being removed during his or her
term of office. There was an attempt to impeach President Ranasinghe
Premadasa in 1991. But the president had an arsenal of options at his
disposal to neutralize his opponents, which he succeeded in doing. These
included acceptance by the speaker of parliament of the motion of
impeachment, a 2/3 majority in parliament, and the provision of
patronage to win the hearts and minds of those who might have voted
against him.
A major concern is that a country as diverse and with internal conflicts
like Sri Lanka needs a single institution to which all groups, racial,
religious and regional, can look to and must look to in order to have
unity in diversity. There are countries that are more diverse and with
more internal conflicts than Sri Lanka. They function under
non-presidential systems. However, at a time when there is widespread
disillusionment about the quality of political leadership in both the
government and opposition, the need is to strengthen institutions, and
not to weaken them. This can best be done by holistic reform rather than
by piecemeal efforts.
HOLISTIC CHANGE
The government media has reported that the steering committee of the
constitutional assembly will resume its meetings from May to revive the
constitutional reforms process after a hiatus of about five months. The
constitutional reform process has been in abeyance since late last year
as the internal issues of the government and local government elections
came to the fore. The process was almost stalled after the five-day
Constitutional Assembly debate of Interim Report of the Steering
Committee in November last year. However, it is reported that the
Constitutional Assembly Secretariat was working throughout the period to
incorporate the amendments that came up during the debate.
Both public opinion polls and prevalent public opinion on the street
have shown that most of the population believe constitutional reform is
important. From the time that the present constitution’s executive
presidential system was first subject to abuse, academic and civil
society opinion formers have critiqued the constitution and called for
its replacement. Therefore, the popular movement to change the present
constitution has a much longer history than the government’s present bid
to formulate a new constitution.
The decision whether to abolish the executive presidency or reform it
needs to be taken with the long term perspective of strengthening
institutions in mind. The anti-Muslim riots which continued for a week
and the failure of the police to act effectively to stop them and to
bring the wrongdoers to justice is reflective of the continuing weakness
of state institutions. Security forces personnel I have had occasion to
speak to in university educational settings, where free exchange of
ideas is paramount, have said that they feel vulnerable. If they do
their duty under one government, they risk being punished under another
government. If they do not follow orders they feel may be illegal, they
risk being punished by over-powerful politicians.
For its longer term progress Sri Lanka needs strong institutions which
both protect those who do their duty and also hold those who abuse their
powers accountable. This cannot be done through ad hoc and piecemeal
constitutional reforms. If the abolition of the executive presidency is
to take place, it should be within the framework of comprehensive
constitutional reform as initially envisaged by the government when it
transformed the entire parliament into a constitutional assembly and
appointed an all-party constitutional steering committee to lead the
reform process.