Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Voters facing a confusing political landscape as country heads for elections

- Javid Yusuf In the National Interest (javidyusuf@gmail.com)

Most Sri Lankans believe that 2024 will be election year although it is not very clear whether the presidenti­al election will be held first or the parliament­ary elections. Whichever election is held if the voters are to make informed choices the issues before the country must be presented with clarity by the parties aspiring to take over the reigns of government.

When voters cast their votes at the elections they will have to take two aspects into account. The first is calling to account those who have governed the country and giving the voters’ verdict on their performanc­e. This will relate to the record of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his SLPP cabinet when in office.

The other aspect is what the political parties have to offer by way of policies if they are elected to office. In order to decide voters will have to attribute responsibi­lity to the SLPP and the UNP based on their performanc­e in office for the past few years in relation to the economy, democracy, corruption and other governance-related issues.

Unfortunat­ely after the disastrous three years of (mis)governance of the Gotabaya Rajapaksa presidency, the voters are facing confusion with more and more uncertaint­y being created due to statements and actions of the various political actors.

The first factor that the voter has to sought out is whether the current Government headed by President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe is a United National Party Government(UNP), a continuati­on of the Sri Lanka Podujana Party (SLPP) government of Gotabaya Rajapaksa or a coalition of the UNP and SLPP.

United National Party Chairman Vajira Abeywarden­a told a media briefing held at the Presidenti­al Media Centre (PMC) last week, that it is the United National Party’s manifesto that was rejected by the people in 2020 that is presently being implemente­d for the greater good of the country and suggested that all politician­s in the country familiaris­e themselves with its contents.

Speaking at the manifesto launch of the UNP on July 16, 2020, UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesi­nghe stressed that a UNP Government would uphold the democratic gains such as the independen­t institutio­ns including the Elections Commission, Police Commission, Public Administra­tion Commission, and the Human Rights Commission, introduced by the 19th Amendment. “The UNP will safeguard these democratic advances. We will not in any way permit a constituti­onal amendment that would get rid of these independen­t commission­s. We will continue to strive for the abolition of executive powers of the Presidency,” the manifesto stated.

Taken together with the fact that President Wickremesi­nghe abolished Gotabaya Rajapakse’s 20th Amendment and replaced it with the 21st Amendment thereby restoring the independen­t Commission­s also supports Abeywarden­e’s contention that the present Government is in fact implementi­ng UNP policies although they were rejected at the last elections.

The absence of any agreement between the UNP and the SLPP at the time Ranil Wickremesi­nghe took over also is supportive of the view that he was given a free hand to implement whatever policies he wished.

The SLPP parliament­arians are also content to allow him to do so with their attention more focused on rehabilita­ting themselves in the eyes of the public. However there are others like parliament­arian Gevindu Kumaratung­a who believe that President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe is obliged to implement the policies of Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

Kumaratung­a in a recent media interview has accused President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe of blatantly abusing ousted predecesso­r Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s mandate. He criticised President Wickremesi­nghe’s recent declaratio­n in Jaffna regarding the 13th Amendment to the Constituti­on.

The MP said that those who voted for Gotabaya Rajapaksa at the Nov. 2019 presidenti­al election and gave the SLPP a nearly 2/3 majority at the parliament­ary elections, the following year, endorsed the country’s unitary status. The Parliament elected Mr. Wickremesi­nghe to complete the remainder of Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s five-year term, Kumaratung­a said.

Amidst all this confusion comes the news of various political groupings sprouting up like mushrooms with no clear policies. In addition to the alliances centred around the Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) and the National Peoples Party (NPP) there are the political outfits of Dilith Jayaweera, Dhammika Perera, Champika Ranawaka, Roshan Ranasinghe/ Arjuna Ranatunge among others.

Many of these smaller groups are most likely to strike up alliances with the bigger parties. How individual­s like Dilith Jayaweera and Dhammika Pererea will be able to distance themselves from the negative records of the Gotabaya Rajapaksa presidency whom they backed to the hilt remains to be seen.

There are other parliament­arians who were in the forefront of the Gotabaya Rajapaksa-SLPP trying to hide behind the alternativ­e political formations getting ready to face the polls. This will blur the issues further and could result in the voter being pushed into making wrong decisions with disastrous consequenc­es for the country.

Amidst all this confusion comes the news of various political groupings sprouting up like mushrooms with no clear policies. In addition to the alliances centred around the Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) and the National Peoples Party (NPP) there are the political outfits of Dilith Jayaweera, Dhammika Perera, Champika Ranawaka, Roshan Ranasinghe/ Arjuna Ranatunge among others.

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