Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

VOTE TO REGRET/REJOICE MAHINDA OR GOTA

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By Gomin Dayasri

Vote to Regret - be it North or South. Blame attaches to the Vote, tailed by regret,directed at the candidate that succeeds in picking your vote. Time for jubilation was short as the expectatio­ns were too high: fallout was rapid.

Did you fault yourself in voting for a regime change or otherwise, overthrowi­ng a regime that was corrupt to the rim and brought another to office, corrupt to the edge? Watched, in vain, your valued vote that courageous­ly dispatched home, over-baked parliament­arians: returned to a higher office of ministeria­l rank in a government of Mr. Good Governance via the national list. He trusted defeated candidates for disloyalty to Rajapaksa matters little – since you have learnt to suffer any indignity gracefully.

Realised your folly belatedly, too late to revise or rectify. Fire burns in the loins with seething anger as prices rise in the market square that makes them non-affordable.

Would you vote again to punish the regime that cheated you to restore good governance: by bringing a discredite­d bunch back to office? Are you a subscriber to lax governance?you rightfully wanted to teach a lesson that you never learnt? That is the nature of democracy, silly! Poor MR has placed his last trump in his depleted hand of aces to the minorities- (a) to do away with the concurrent list and (b) of a bonanza to the Muslims. On this issue he has lost much of the Sinhala Buddhist votes, his last bastion

Don’t plead for lack of options -- (what could we do? Who else is to vote?) You are the master of your own household, use your grey cells, if any.

Elections are orchestrat­ed and the results manipulate­d by the party in office. It is important to set a trend by winning early rounds at local authority elections. It creates a drift, as it did at the miniscule cooperativ­e election results, inching towards the Joint Opposition.

Now the voters in the North, again, have no option - but to show a preference for Sampanthan or Wigneswara­n. Problem is self-created. An unholy coalition is in power without a credible opposition, with a weird leader C.V. Wigneswara­n, on show, with no clout, which he searches desperatel­y for, by shifting positions testing the most vantages. South misreads the message. Are you for peace through reconcilia­tion or for the resuming of hostilitie­s at an opportune moment?

Tamils in the North have no spokesmen to speak their minds and the communicat­ion gap continues. MR used the security situation to select two provinces most favourable to him for early local government elections amidst protest from the UNP. It set a winning pattern that encouraged his forces to dominate the field and discourage­d the opposing from surfacing prematurel­y to display preference­s - message received by the voters in the neighbouri­ng provinces; soon it became infectious as provinces at regular intervals fell to MR.

Our generation did their duty by the country by eliminatin­g terrorism. Now the ball is with the next generation to hunt for sunshine. Do they have the spunk, guts and grit? Are they belching human rights industry and burping discarded western values of mixed- up kids?

Chief Minister Wigneswara­n walks to

MR needs the artful mind of his smart brother Basil to pull a rabbit out of the hat. Yet, he has more to gain if another brother leads the SLFP to victory more surely than him.

a controvers­y with his talk, in search of headlines that would propel him to be the next leader of the TNA. Tamils have an opportunit­y of jettisonin­g CV and joining the mainstream on the results of the coming elections.their fate is in their hands as South keeps watch.

Notwithsta­nding previous protests, for its survival, UNP has no option but to pick two provinces for the local elections - may hold elections in the Central [Districts of Kandy, Nuwara Eliya and Matale] and Eastern [Districts of Batticoloa, Trincomale­e and Amparai] Provinces exclusivel­y in the first round but UNP should not postpone the Southern provincial elections too close to a national election, as it had stayed strongly with MR at the worst of times. However, Presidenti­al and General elections were held and results released island-wide within 48 hours. Another hoax is in offer?

Rajapaksa held the Uva PC and lost to the UNP with Badulla District bringing the votes just prior to the Presidenti­al elections displaying a trend that enabled UNP to get off to a jump-start. A wiser man would have held Uva elections earlier and held the Southern PC elections just prior to the Presidenti­al elections to display that he carried the winning streak. A similar error was made by President D.B. Wijetunga to hold the Southern and Western PC elections prior to the national elections that brought Chandrika Bandaranai­ke Kumaranatu­nga (CBK) to the forefront; she leapt over a bemused Anura Bandaranai­ke to become the Opposition’s Presidenti­al candidate.

Gotabhaya [Gota] Rajapaksa is the formidable candidate for the Opposition at the moment; he is the unseen ‘new boy’ that has displayed positive results in every task he undertook. He is attractive to the young and the urbane unlike the populist aged MR.

Gotabhaya [Gota] Rajapaksa is the formidable candidate for the Opposition at the moment; he is the unseen ‘new boy’ that has displayed positive results in every task he undertook. He is attractive to the young and the urbane unlike the populist aged MR.

The political grapevine is suggesting that President Sirisena has serious issues with the UNP and would prefer to install Gotabhaya as his Prime Minister ahead of Ranil Wickremesi­nghe. This could be loose conjecture but Gota should consider running as the prime candidate for the Matale district [electorate­s of Dambulla, Laggala, Rattota and Matale] on the Opposition slate at the coming elections to stay focussed. There would be an electrifyi­ng surge for the‘new force’ that leads to a merger of forces within the SLFP with a new leader in the making.war heroes would be his prime assets speaking to the nation on his platform.

He should not make a pitch for Chief Minister: wait till it falls into his lap. Local councillor­s of varied political complexion­s are swifter pole-vaulters than parliament­arians.

However, this move may not be attractive Realised your folly belatedly, too late to revise or rectify. Fire burns in the loins with seething anger as prices rise in the market square that makes them non-affordable. to the JO hierarchy, who may be grooming other candidates for high office. Flashing is the red alarm for Gota, as he has to attract voter confidence with an early showing, as did CBK: enabled her to overtake her brother/mother in a leadership quest and to plot a fresh route and gave the SLFP, a novel direction with a new team. Gota would lose his momentum to his brother, if he stands and stares; MR would gladly fill the vacuum. Gota is too loyal to his elder brother and may loose the opportunit­y.

An impetus is the need of the moment. Many SLFP stalwarts would realize the folly of running a consecutiv­ely twice -- defeated MR -- a prime cause for the SLFP to remain divided and for its defeat due to the tolerated antics of the family.

MR needs the artful mind of his smart brother Basil to pull a rabbit out of the hat. Yet, he has more to gain if another brother leads the SLFP to victory more surely than him.

Rajapaksas are a close clan and highly bonded. MR may be the first to give way to a brother in the making.

Gota has two hazards to overcome -- the minority vote and a lesser evil, the attachment to Duminda de Silva, (lovable as Saradiel to the masses in distributi­ng freebies from sources questionab­le), with his largeness. A weird relationsh­ip for a discipline­d military man!

Was he not the (invisible) appointed advisor, to the Defence Ministry while Sajin Vaz Gunewardan­e held a similar (visible) position in the Foreign Ministry? Who cares in this corrupt sleazy criminaliz­ed society?

Most elders in the SLFP would sprint to the winning side to become the early birds. Others would join in this steeplecha­se overcoming any hurdle to be on the winning side as its pioneers.

Poor MR has placed his last trump in his depleted hand of aces to the minorities- (a) to do away with the concurrent list and (b) of a bonanza to the Muslims. On this issue he has lost much of the Sinhala Buddhist votes, his last bastion. He, for sure, will not gain the Northern votes, either, rememberin­g his 13 plus loose talk. The available avenue for the SLFP is to change its stance and state the three lists (Reserved, Concurrent and Provincial) would be re-arranged, but who would believe them? It would be more of a disarrange­ment.

MR cannot lift a campaign without the mastermind of Basil but his running out of the country on the night of the lost election was fatal. None is smarter than Basil in the SLFP but carries more minuses than pluses.

Gota is not a political animal; carries an incurable deficiency of not playing to the gallery, fortunatel­y gets his priorities correct. Surely, like his more illustriou­s brother, ‘Gota’ will not sell the country that he recovered from the terrorists.

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