Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

IMPORTANCE OF BEING KARU J

Analysing pros and cons of Karu J as next UNP Presidenti­al Candidate

-

A people who elect corrupt politician­s, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims... But accomplice­s ~GEORGE ORWELL

Karu Jayasuriya’s political career started in the mid-nineties. Karu Jayasuriya, born on September 29, 1940, came to limelight after he became the Mayor of Colombo from 1997 to 1999. His expertise as an able private sector executive would have played an indispensa­ble part during his tenure as Mayor of Colombo for him to be considered amongst the best of Colombo’s Mayors of all time.

It was during his time that the city of Colombo looked like a typically clean and utterly habitable city at all-comers.

The unassuming posture that he displayed when relating to the highest and lowest of society brought him a reputation that no presentday politician could boast about.

Yet, this same unassuming conduct on his part did, in fact, hinder his rise to the top of his political party, United National Party (UNP).

That unassertiv­e, patient and modest approach to a profession, which at all times demanded a cavalier and aggressive demeanour from those who practised it, may have halted his rise in the short run, but when considerin­g the long-term sustainabi­lity of an astute politician, such a demeanour is a concealed advantage.

The only indisputab­le disadvanta­ge is that with a person who is already in his sixties trying to play the long-term game, the passage of years keeps piling up, making him look much older when the real time comes to assert himself.

Karu Jayasuriya’s most distinct disadvanta­ge in being considered for the next Presidenti­al Elections candidate is the number of years.

By the year 2020, when the Presidenti­al Elections are due, Karu will be 80 years old or young. J. R. Jayewarden­e climbed the proverbial greasy pole of politics when he was 71 years old.

As a result, as was most aptly and illustrati­vely penned in his biography by Professor K. M. de Silva, JR, when he assumed power in 1977, looked more like an old man in a rush rather than a calculatin­g strategist for which he was reputed.

However, it is not fair by both JR and Karu Jayasuriya to be compared against each other.

Times have changed and have taken a nasty toll on a rapidly deteriorat­ing political culture, which in its intrinsic core has come out as a mirror of the changes that our society has been painstakin­gly enduring during its meandering course.

In 2018, the UNP and its coalition Government are undergoing a serious yet an inscrutabl­e course change.

The UNP, for all its pomp and boast over the last two-and-half-years, yet cannot accurately claim that it had really won any victory at the electorate, especially in the Sinhalese Buddhist voter base.

This is exactly where Karu Jayasuriya’s claim to the highest job in the land matters.

His acceptance among the Sinhalese Buddhists and specifical­ly among the Buddhist clergy coupled with the trust and faith reposed on him by the minorities as a friendly, patient, and amiable negotiator have contribute­d to him being considered for the job.

Given these divergent advantages, Karu J might appeal as the best candidate, provided Ranil Wickremesi­nghe opts to keep out of the Presidenti­al Election as the UNP candidate this time as well.

Yet, one glaring and tangibly intense disadvanta­ge that remains is his age and lack of enthusiasm and demand from the youth, at least as yet.

Neverthele­ss, Karu J seems to enjoy immense trust from the country’s civil organizati­ons, whose prime platform is law and order, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

His stringent allegiance to the process as against substance, taken in the context of sophistica­ted political calculatio­n, might stand in good stead as it is the process by which a socio-political change could be attained and then administer­ed as much as a substance that very process is supposed to be executing.

However, blind adherence to the process could, in the realm of politics, harm the politician, who tries to empower that process.

In an environmen­t in which optics matters more than the process and substance, it is scrupulous­ly hard to market a politician and his policies and principles to the large mob of voters.

Against such a confusing backdrop, let us examine once again the key elements that the next UNP or Unp-led Presidenti­al Candidate need to have in his or her bag in order to run a legitimate­ly aggressive

Karu most distinct disadvanta­ge for the next Presidenti­al Elections is the number of years Accepted by Sinhalese Buddhists and the Clergy

and successful campaign:

1. The Maha Sanga 2. Unstinted support of the minorities 3. Intangible­s including leadership, youth and charisma.

Does Karu Jayasuriya have the potential to garner the support of these key elements? Karu J certainly has the first two. And in both those categories, he enjoys the highest degree in the first. And in the second element, he is either better than or equal to Ranil Wickremesi­nghe.

It is in the intangible­s that Karu J falls behind both Sajith Premadasa and Navin Dissanayak­e, the other two plausible contenders.

Some might argue the cases for Champika Ranawaka, Rajitha Senaratne and even Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka.

While Sarath Fonseka would disqualify himself as a loser as recent as in 2009, both Champika and Rajitha would have to climb a steep hill, in convincing the UNP voters, as authentic UNP members.

Minorities trust him as a friendly, patient, and amiable negotiator His expertise as an able private sector executive played an indispensa­ble part

So, we are back to square one.

If Karu Jayasuriya is not the so-called Dark Horse, then who is it?

Is there any other who would wear that badge, Dark Horse? There doesn’t seem to be any. However, what is not mentioned in the above formulatio­n is a quality of the candidate as perceived to be a winner.

While acknowledg­ing that this is no final pitch for a UNP candidate, it must also be borne in mind that time is not in favour of the United National Party.

It might be all too late for a brand new candidate to get his gear together and run an effective and winning campaign.

Who might be the opponent? There are a consistent hue and cry about one particular Rajapaksa whose country-loyalties might be belonging to continents far, far away from Mother Lanka.

As a matter of fact, that very element of the political formula may very well work against the grain of commonsens­ical politics.

Those who profess patriotism and thunder from atop lofty towers need to come down at least every now and then to listen to their own conscience­s.

What seems to baffle an ordinarily educated mind does not seem to astonish these Rajapaksas, who have over the last two decades and a half shown unlimited capacity for avarice and hunger for power.

Yet, the failure on the part of the present coalition Government to bring these violators of basic ethical norms and perpetrato­rs of alleged financial crimes to justice has caused the public to lose faith in the Coalition Government.

This failure has further engendered a notion of suspicion and distrust among the curious public; it has heightened and aroused the stigmatic aura that some members of the governing party are colluding with the Rajapaksas in order to pave the way for a total exoneratio­n of the alleged culprits.

Therefore, the options are limited and hard to discern.

If the election of Maithripal­a Sirisena was a watershed in our politics, in the event of a comeback of the Rajapaksas, the next Presidenti­al Elections might well be a reversal of all the hopes and aspiration­s of a susceptibl­e public.

Such vulnerabil­ities apart, any collusion or even a hint of collusion by any members of the current administra­tion with the Rajapaksas will amount to a grotesque miscarriag­e of justice. The writer can be contacted at vishwamith­ra1984@mail.com

By the year 2020, when the Presidenti­al Elections are due, Karu will be 80 years old or young. J. R. Jayewarden­e climbed the proverbial greasy pole of politics when he was 71 years old

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka