Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

British elections: Shake, rattle and roll

-

That was the position when a general election was suddenly foisted on the public by a prime minister who had vowed several times earlier to complete the full parliament­ary term and not call for a snap election.

There were several things wrong with the Theresa May campaign which at the time of writing has shaken her closeknit campaign team and rattled May. To begin with they tried to turn this into a presidenti­al- style campaign with May projected as a kind of English Joan of Arc who is the only one capable of taking on the continenta­l European Union and winning the best for Britain.

But if one is to believe some of what is written and said today in the media and elsewhere the British are preparing to burn her at the stake - metaphoric­ally speaking - as the English did to the real Joan of Arc in historical times.

The truth is that the presidenti­al- style campaign does not suit Theresa May. She does not have an impressive and charismati­c public presence. She has always been known to work in small, close- knit circles in which she is more comfortabl­e.

But when the entire campaign was focused on Theresa May the individual rather than on the Conservati­ve Party, its strengths and its prominent personalit­ies, it became a May event that now may not happen as the campaign team had planned.

Their campaign slogan was strong and stable leadership. But those personal characteri­stics as a tough woman blown out of proportion began to fall apart when the Conservati­ve Party manifesto was released just recently.

Moreover Theresa May ducked a TV debate of party leaders raising questions about her ability to respond to questionin­g and scrutiny and defend her policies in a live performanc­e before a live audience.

She also turned down an invitation for a debate with Corbyn saying that she had faced him each Wednesday in parliament across the despatch box during prime minister’s question time.

But that was hardly a defensible position for right now the debate is centered round her manifesto rather than what should have been a broadly agreed party manifesto which could then be more faithfully and strongly defended by the party as a whole.

The greatest blow to her campaign has been May’s attempt to go back on a manifesto proposal on social care where elderly people would have to pay a share for social care. It has come to be castigated as the “dementia tax” and would affect the 65- years and over who are basically Conservati­ve Party supporters.

May has had to try and wriggle out of it saying that her government would have a cap on the upper limit after consultati­ons with relevant bodies and the public. So going back in a way on a key manifesto proposal so shortly before the polling has shown that May is rattled and shaken by the public reaction and that she is not the strong and stable leader she was portrayed to be.

The Labour Party on the other hand as come up with a populist manifesto promising to nationalis­e rail and mail, to remove tuition fees for students, put more police on the streets and allocate more funds for the National Health Service which many say is slowly crumbling, and to build more housing.

Immigratio­n remains a key issue with May accused of not being able to reduce migration as promised during her years as Home Secretary and even now unable to put a figure on how many migrants would be permitted to come here.

With just a few days to go the “Team May” campaign is trying to veer the whole campaign back to Brexit and who would be able to negotiate more successful­ly with the European Union which generally appears cheesed off with May’s aggressive approach.

The Conservati­ve team has learnt that pitching May as the great leader and denigratin­g Corbyn as an outdated politician, has backfired somewhat with voter sympathy turning in favour of the person they see as beleaguere­d with even party faithfuls sniping at him.

The problem for Labour however is that though it has presented a populist program it seems that the costs of these policies do not seem to add up and Labour would be hard put to find the funds required to sustain such policies.

One of course is reminded of Sri Lanka’s own political leaders who not so long ago promised the sun and moon but have quietly slipped out from implementi­ng them for lack of finances though they apparently have enough to provide increased perks and privileges for parliament­arians.

With four days to go for the election the money seems to be on May winning but not with the increased majority she hoped to get. But some predict that the result could even be a ‘ hung’ parliament. If there is such a close call the horse trading to put together a coalition government will begin.

Labour has said it will not enter into any coalition. But politician­s are, after all, politician­s not for nothing. Politician­s over here may be more principled than many in Sri Lanka who would cross, double cross and even treble cross if the terms for their support are right.

In the event the election results in a defeat for the Conservati­ves and a Labour- led coalition comes to power then Sri Lanka will have to recalibrat­e its bilateral relations with the UK. A Labour- led coalition would not be the most favourable to Sri Lanka, especially when one looks at Corbyn’s past record vis a vis Sri Lanka’s human rights and the Tamil issue and his participat­ion at anti- Sri Lanka and proLTTE rallies.

Moreover the Labour Party and the Lib- Dems have in the last decade or more been critical of the Sri Lanka Government and would want to take a tough stand at the UNHRC especially on the full implementa­tion of the UK- supported resolution calling for accountabi­lity trials on allegation­s of war crimes and violations of internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

From Colombo’s standpoint a return of a Conservati­ve Government would be best. But would Theresa May be able to obtain the necessary majority for her to have a firm hand on the tiller.

If a clear outcome emerges then we should know by early Friday. Otherwise we would have to wait till the horse traders begin dealing.

 ??  ?? Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May reacts as she speaks at an election campaign event at Pride Park Stadium in Derby, Britian. Election are due on Thursday. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May reacts as she speaks at an election campaign event at Pride Park Stadium in Derby, Britian. Election are due on Thursday. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka