Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NORTHERN VOTE AND NATIONAL ENGAGEMENT

The 2019 presidenti­al election was going to be a difficult one for the North TNA caught in this conundrum delayed their support for Sajith, until close to the elections

- By Ahilan Kadirgamar

With Gotabaya Rajapaska claiming victory in the presidenti­al elections, how does one understand the Northern vote? The Northern electoral districts of Jaffna and

Vanni with just around 5% of the population of the country are marginal in determinin­g electoral outcome except in very close electoral races. Neverthele­ss, for a country that has gone through a civil war, and a region that could not fully participat­e in national electoral politics for decades, the Northern vote is reflective of the changing politics of a war-torn people.

The 2019 presidenti­al election was going to be a difficult one for the North. The disappoint­ment with the Maithri-ranil

Government after the hopes set by regime change in 2015 and the lack of any strong vision on the part of UNP candidate Sajith

Premadasa to address minority concerns made mobilisati­on difficult. The TNA caught in this conundrum delayed their support for Sajith, until close to the elections. The opportunis­tic narrow Tamil nationalis­ts sought to exploit this situation and called for a boycott.

In reality, the Northern voters in this election did not take direction from any of the political actors, and in fact moved on their own well before even the TNA supported Sajith. The Northern vote was a rejection of the militarise­d and repressive politics of the previous Rajapaksa Government. Furthermor­e, the higher voter turnout was a damning rejection of the boycott call and exclusiona­ry politics of the Tamil nationalis­t fringe. I argue, the Northern vote is a reflection of the democratic politics that has emerged in the war-torn regions and significan­tly a readiness to engage in national politics.

POLARISING DISCOURSE

The election results and the imagery of the green in the North and East in contrast to the Maroon in the South are bound to provide a field day for the nationalis­ts on both sides. They will seek to use this election as the ground for their polarising politics; of competitio­n and defeat of one side over the other in ethno-nationalis­t terms.

In reality, this was not an election that was going to be determined by the minorities, but it was an election fought in the South and won by a well mobilised political machine, which had worked hard since its defeat in 2015 and even took the risk of breaking from the SLFP and forming its own party. The SLPP used every opportunit­y to its advantage including the anti-incumbent vote so characteri­stic of Sri Lankan electoral politics, the economic failures of the Government and the great security lapses that led to the grave disaster of the Easteratta­cks.

The momentum created by SLPP did not even face a serious challenge as UNP leader Ranil Wickremesi­nghe delayed and weakened his own party’s presidenti­al candidate. The coalition of an opposition that was necessary to put up a serious fight against the SLPP was never to materialis­e as the JVP and a range of actors went their own way.

These disastrous failures of the political leadership from different quarters should not be blamed on the people. Furthermor­e, significan­t electoral shifts are symptoms of popular disenchant­ment of economic, social and political proportion­s. Sadly, such disenchant­ment is the ground on which polarising nationalis­t forces thrive. The task of progressiv­es from all corners of the country is to confront the imminent polarisati­on through channels of communicat­ion for coexistenc­e.

DEMOCRACY AND SOLIDARITY

For my friends in the South and their ill-timed political call for building a third force before the presidenti­al election, now is the time to call for that third force. A third force cannot emerge out of one ethnic community alone, but has to recognise class as inherent to all communitie­s, and the inter-relationsh­ip of class, ethnicity, gender and caste in any progressiv­e politics.

If the rural war-torn masses of the North were willing to engage with an election in which little of their future aspiration­s were articulate­d, imagine the room for a national alternativ­e that can galvanise the concerns of those on the periphery from all ethnic communitie­s. Out of the pessimism of the intellect with analysing electoral politics, the optimism of will for organising towards economic justice and political freedoms must emerge. These are times to dig trenches for deepening democratic politics and build bridges of solidarity across the country.

In reality, the Northern voters in this election did not take direction from any of the political actors,

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