Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Reigning in the Executive President

Another strange developmen­t is the President using his powers to change the leadership of a party other than his own Officials of Parliament defied the Speaker and decided to follow the President, an institutio­n they were supposed to check and balance P

- By Radhika Coomaraswa­my

The Prime Minister was removed in the stealth of the night replaced by the archrival that the President was elected to depose, Parliament was prorogued and then dissolved and a huge cabinet appointed

The fact that the SLPP is a willing partner in this even though it has a great deal of popularity in the country and would have probably won the next election is also disturbing

For the most part of the last few weeks we have been in a suspended state of disbelief. Yes, the 2015 government had not lived up to its expectatio­ns, some people were plotting for the next election to teach them a lesson, and then lightning struck. The Prime Minister was removed in the stealth of the night replaced by the arch-rival that the President was elected to depose, Parliament was prorogued and then dissolved and a huge cabinet appointed. Neither the Prime Minister nor the cabinet have shown that they have the majority of Parliament behind them and this autocratic rule will continue until January 5, unless the Supreme Court decides otherwise.

Every day my friends and I text each other with informatio­n on who is crossing, what is happening here, what is happening there, so much so that we get lost in the weeds and miss the big picture. What is the big picture? We are today witnessing the gross abuse of executive power in ways that have been quite unimaginab­le even to the best of our cynics. It is power being wielded not only against the traditions and customs of a parliament­ary tradition but in brazen disregard of the words and terms of the Constituti­on. When I meet people socially due to spin and confusion they say, “Who cares - one set of crooks vs. another”. This is not about the crooks; it is about institutio­ns, democracy and the system of government you would like in place for your children.

The first institutio­n under attack by this runaway executive is the institutio­n of Parliament. It is true the public image of Parliament and parliament­arians is not very good but they do pass laws and do many other things that allow us to govern ourselves according to a set process. The procedure set for the removal of the Prime Minister is quite clear, Sinhala technicali­ties notwithsta­nding. But the most important point in a parliament­ary democracy is that the prime minister must enjoy the confidence of a parliament­ary majority. So even if the removal and appointmen­t were legal, the next step would have been to go to Parliament and take a floor test as soon as possible to see who enjoys the confidence of the house. Instead Parliament was prorogued and dissolved leaving behind a Prime Minister and Cabinet that do not have the approval of Parliament. That is what is meant by autocratic rule. The fact that the SLPP is a willing partner in this even though it has a great deal of popularity in the country and would have probably won the next election is also disturbing.

What was equally as disturbing as the attack on Parliament was the pressure and intimidati­on aimed at the Speaker. Parliament is supposed to be a co-equal arm of government, a check to a willful executive. Parliament­ary staff are expected to take their instructio­ns from the Speaker who heads this co-equal arm. Instead officials of Parliament defied the Speaker and decided to follow the President, an institutio­n they were supposed to check and balance. Such behaviour is a serious threat to Parliament­ary democracy and one can only congratula­te the Speaker for standing his ground. Protecting the powers, privileges and immunities of the Speaker is a must, if we are to remain a parliament­ary democracy.

The second tradition that is being attacked by the runaway executive are long settled rules of legal interpreta­tion. The arguments for dissolutio­n that the government presented and will be tested in the Supreme Court are a case in point. The Constituti­on gives the President a general power to dissolve, as one of his many powers. Then in a specific provision it states that the President can only dissolve Parliament after four and-a-half years. It is one of the longest settled rules of legal interpreta­tion that the specific trumps the general; specific provisions qualify the general power. This perversion of legal interpreta­tion in this case will perplex any lawyer and leads us to seriously question the motives of those who make such a crude, instrument­al use of the law.

Another strange developmen­t is the President using his powers to change the leadership of a party other than his own. Whether the UNP needs a change of leadership is something to be discussed by the members of the party and the public. But removing proroguing, dissolving Parliament all because you do not like the leader of another party is quite extraordin­ary.

The President in his first speech on the subject equated his relationsh­ip with the Prime Minister as a bad marriage. Surely the answer to a bad marriage is to seek the advice of a counsellor and not to burn the house down with the children in it. In politics and in life, one has to work with people one does not like. One can manoeuvre, discuss or position oneself in this situation but protecting institutio­ns and their integrity must surely be more important than personalit­y difference­s.

When the President prorogued Parliament to try and get a parliament­ary majority, I was astounded but found that most people were equivocal. I was interested by the comment average people made. It was along the lines of “It is a done deal they will buy them over”. There was very little moral outrage in this reaction but a cynical acceptance of what politics was like in this day and age. The fact that my Member of Parliament can be bought over for any amount of money without any reaction made me realize the depth of despair in this country with regard to our politics.

Interestin­gly the people who received the least respect were the minority parties. Many people assured me that they would be bought over first. As a minority I found this a stunning rebuke to our self-respect. Is that what people think of minority political leaders that they can be bought and sold in an auction?

Speaking of minorities, the scenes at Rupavahini, the Ceylon Petroleum Corporatio­n, the release of the man supposedly responsibl­e for the Digana anti-muslim riots instead of re-remanding him as they did in the past, began to raise the threshold of fear - the fear of unruly mobs let lose by politician­s. The fear has not gone away. One must commend the Army Commander and the armed services for staying away from this very political contest and one must acknowledg­e that whatever else he did, the President did not call out the military. Neverthele­ss there are ominous signs, pockets of violence, pockets of thuggery and an uneasy peace.

In recent years we had become accustomed to a diversity of media voices. Today, even though pockets of diversity remain there seems to be a concerted effort to convey only one voice, one truth. Much of it is sheer spin. Foreign envoys, local political parties and other individual­s would recount how they would meet the President on his request and they would speak their mind but the discussion­s were used as a photo opportunit­y to make out to the public that everyone was extending their support. There is so much spin that one does not know what is truth and what is reality. One young person told me that she watches the news but her instincts tell her it is all wrong. As a result everyone goes back to their social media bubble and perhaps the internatio­nal press to discern what is happening. A country that loses touch with reality and the-truth, especially a small country such as ours, is on a spiral towards disaster nationally and internatio­nally.

The internatio­nal repercussi­ons of what has happened will have huge implicatio­ns especially in the near future. For the moment we are an internatio­nally “suspect” country. Except for Burundi, I do not think anyone has recognized the new government and probably will not until January. I worked on the issue of the Rohingyas and Myanmar and understood the terrible consequenc­es of being a cast out nation. Yes they survive but at what cost? Beating tribal drums, at war with the west while desiring their investment, and their people portrayed to the world as ugly and prejudiced.

We became the number one destinatio­n of Lonely Planet, the most respected travel magazine, and like ‘evil eye’, within the week the constituti­onal crisis occurred. Now we are nowhere in the listings. When one was fighting a war, it must have been exhilarati­ng to some to be fighting the imperialis­t west but in peacetime, the west, India and China are equally important as tourists, as buyers of our exports and as investors. Being a castaway nation even for a few months is just not worth the heated rhetoric.

We are now experienci­ng a runaway executive, autocratic rule and promise of free elections under the rubric of that autocratic rule. One can hope the Supreme Court will stop the direction of this flow and that perhaps we can have general elections under a caretaker government. The first thing that any new government should do is to do away with or severely limit the powers of the executive president. Time and time again this institutio­n has destroyed the fabric of Sri Lankan life. Ven. Sobitha Thera gave his life in struggling for its abolition. In his memory, we must keep up the effort to ensure that any executive under our Constituti­on cannot act on whims and fancies, only according to democratic traditions and the rule of law.

One young person told me that she watches the news but her instincts tell her it is all wrong. As a result everyone goes back to their social media bubble and perhaps the internatio­nal press to discern what is happening

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