Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

AUSTRALIAN DISSOLUTIO­N IS NOT SIMILAR TO SRI LANKA

COMMENTS ON THE COMPARISON OF THE PRESENT CONSTITUTI­ONAL QUESTION WITH THE DISMISSAL OF THE WHITLAM GOVERNMENT IN AUSTRALIA

- By Prof. Suri Ratnapala

The President’s has no prerogativ­e powers. His powers are limited by the express words of the Constituti­on which he has undertaken by affirmatio­n to observe

There seems to be a serious misunderst­anding about Sri Lanka’s Constituti­on with respect to the President’s power to dissolve the Parliament. It is claimed that under the parliament­ary system, the President may dissolve the Parliament at his or her discretion at any time during its term. This is the central question before the Supreme Court in the proceeding challengin­g the President’s proclamati­on purporting to dissolve the current Parliament. I have expressed my opinion on this question elsewhere.

The purpose of this note is to clear up another confusion. Parliament­arian Mahinda Rajapaksa, among others, had cited as a precedent the dismissal of the Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam and the dissolutio­n of both Houses of Parliament by the Governor-general in 1975.

This involves serious misunderst­andings of the facts concerning the dismissal and the relevant provisions of the Australian Constituti­on.

The political events surroundin­g the dismissal of Whitlam were both acrimoniou­s and controvers­ial.

They are too complex to document here. The immediate cause of the dismissal and dissolutio­n was the Senate’s denial of supply to the government by deferring decisions on two Appropriat­ion Bills which had already received Lower House approval.

The protracted deadlock breaking process set out in s 57 (that can involve a double-dissolutio­n and a General Election) could not be used as supply would have run out by then.

G-G John Kerr tried but failed to persuade Mr Whitlam to advise dissolutio­n on the principle that a government that cannot secure supply through Parliament should either resign or advise a new election.

The G-G then sought the following guarantees from the Leader of the Opposition Mr Malcolm Fraser, namely, that if appointed Caretaker PM, he would:

1. Ensure that the Appropriat­ion Bills will be passed by the Senate to secure supply,

2. Advise the G-G to dissolve both House and hold a general election, and

3. Maintain the status quo on policy, appointmen­ts etc. during the caretaker period.

It is important to note a few salient constituti­onal rules and principles and points of difference between the Whitlam saga and the present impasse in Sri Lanka.

1. The claim that in the classic Westminste­r parliament­ary democracy, the monarch has untrammell­ed power to dissolve the Parliament is fallacious. Since the early 19th Century at least, the monarch was constraine­d by convention to follow the PM’S advice and the PM was likewise restrained by convention. Whatever discretion the monarch had in the UK was removed by the Fixed-term Parliament­s Act 2011 (c. 14). The Act, which fixes the term of the House of Commons as 5 years, allows earlier dissolutio­n only if: (a) A vote of no confidence in the government is carried in the House of Commons, or

(b) The House of Commons requests a dissolutio­n by a vote of two thirds of the House.

The Nineteenth Amendment incorporat­ed these two conditions in limiting the President’s power to dissolve Parliament.

2. According to s 64 of the Australian Constituti­on, the Ministers, including the Prime Minister, serve at the pleasure of the Governor-general. The President of Sri Lanka has no such power. He or she must choose as PM a member likely to command the confidence of the House who can then be dismissed only by Parliament.

3. Unlike the Whitlam Government, PM Wickremasi­nghe and the Cabinet have obtained supply and have shown the ability to secure future funding for the government’s recurring expenditur­e.

4. Sri Lanka is not a classic parliament­ary system in the Westminste­r model. The President’s has no prerogativ­e powers. His powers are limited by the express words of the Constituti­on which he has undertaken by affirmatio­n to observe.

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