Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

A rude but entirely predictabl­e electoral shock

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Those who are bewildered by the results of Sri Lanka's local government elections a week ago need a harsh reality check if not a resounding knock to the head..

Massive public discomfitu­re

For it must be said that the rude punishment dealt by the electorate to the Sirisena-Wickremesi­nghe coalition government was entirely predictabl­e. From mid last year to perhaps even earlier, massively increasing public discomfitu­re had turned to outright anger directed towards a coterie of quarreling and oftentimes openly incompeten­t rulers.

Granted, there were notable improvemen­ts in the Rule of Law. Yet the approach of the United National Party (UNP) driving the unity Government and equally blinded Colombo based civil society acolytes were informed by a deeply disturbing­ly elitist and patronizin­g mind frame. Ordinary citizens in the North and the South were treated much llike obedient cattle, to be shepherded and thought-manipulate­d into uncomplain­ing quiescence as high games of bond scams, wastage of public funds and an engineered 'reconcilia­tion process' continued.

Committees sat in esoteric constituti­onal reform exercises in Colombo that touched on all the unhappy trigger points that had divided the Sri Lankan people since independen­ce, such as religion, language and political power while the larger public was unforgivab­ly left excluded and increasing­ly incensed. The image of an out-of-touch Government dictated to by internatio­nal pressure grew even as the 'yahapalana­ya' shine faded, aggravated by fulsome praise on the part of Western emissaries whose visits became disconcert­ingly frequent. Unsurprisi­ngly this formed a useful point for the Rajapaksa opposition to labour.

The old devil of an unpatrioti­c UNP was resuscitat­ed,leading to deadly cause and effect where the popular imaginatio­n was concerned.

Contrast between the elite and the marginalis­ed

As commonly reminded, insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. Well, for the unfortunat­e citizenry of this country, that lunacy has been exemplifie­d by the conduct of the UNP for the exact same mistakes committed in 2001

2003 by the then ruling

United

National

Front (UNF) government were repeated this time around as well.

And crucially, basic governance faltered, resulting in serious economic consequenc­es for the already poor and marginalis­ed, including farmers being denied their fertiliser in the paddy growing regions of the land. Talking to rural voters in the areas of the North Central province and the Uva province, it was pointed out in these column spaces months ago that it was a grave misconcept­ion to think that village voters were not aware of the shenanigan­s going on in Colombo. Indeed, that awareness existed in painful and excruciati­ng detail.

At that time, I drew the grotesque contrast between farmers protesting in regard to inadequate fertiliser supplies in the sweltering sun while white-collar crooks in slick suits got away with millions shielded by patronage politics.

The truth of that could not be glossed over by blustering damage control in the last few months before the elections nor by rhetoric by the President. Where the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) component of the Government was concerned, this was also percieved to be inefficien­t with some Ministers attracting as much censure as their UNP counterpar­ts.

And most damagingly, the anti-corruption drive against the gross corruptors of the Rajapaksa era fizzled out in a splutter of damp squibs from 2015 itself. The public grew weary of watching front-liners of the previous regime walk to courts and back smiling broadly for the television cameras amidst halfhearte­d explanatio­ns of laws delays and uncooperat­ive foreign government­s by UNP Ministers.

Deep cynicism regarding introspect­ion

But ensconced in a comforting and un-apologetic­ally elitist Colombo bubble of misplaced complacenc­y, eagerly nourished by advisors and civil society cheerleade­rs through the reassuring echo chambers of social media, the unity alliance seemed unprepared for the inevitable electoral shock sooner or later. In fact, there was a deep cynicism about the very need for introspect­ion.

When justifiabl­e critiques were made regarding failures of governance in early 2015 in these column spaces and elsewhere, these were dismissed as irrelevant. When the Prime Minister appeared in a show of bravado before the popularly termed Central Bank Treasury Bond Commission of Inquiry, there were showers of praise from the typically deluded, hailing the fact that this was the first time that a Prime Minister had deigned to grace a commission sitting.

Former President Chandrika Kumaratung­a responded in a reprehensi­ble congratula­tory message and apologists of all shapes and forms scrambled to disguise basic failures of financial accountabi­lity.

Other ironies abounded. This was a contest conducted at the lowest levels of Sri Lanka's electoral hierarchy for local government councils but which saw a President, a Prime Minister and a former President exchanging blows in clear games of political upmanship. And the outcome was foreseeabl­e.

Weighing heavily in favour of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa on 10th February 2018, voters showed the contemptuo­us middle finger to all and sundry. It was a devastatin­g blow to the exuberance of the democratic gains made in 2015

Gross inequities of 'yahapalana­ya' rule

So let us be clear about one fact. The gross inequities of ' yahapalana­ya' rule are at the root of Saturday's electoral debacle. The blame is to be attributed fairly and squarely to this Government.

In the face of looming provincial and national level elections in the near future, the unity alliance must even now, look inwards and attempt serious course correction, if further ignominiou­s defeats are to be avoided.

The alternativ­e is too catastroph­ic to contemplat­e.

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