Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SAJITH SHOULD SHUN VAGUENESS IN HIS POLICIES

Premadasa is representi­ng the long-awaited change, that was so badly needed by the UNP he is carrying the burden of the UNP’S epic mess up Sajith has won the UNP’S internal contest. But, he is still a long way from winning the Presidency

- By Ranga Jayasuriya

Last week, the United National Party Working Committee nominated Sajith Premadasa as the presidenti­al candidate substance.of the Grand Old Party, and effectivel­y, of the UNP led alliance. Mr Premadasa’s candidatur­e may not impress those who wanted a more forthright choice with a degree of policy

But, alas, there was no such in the competitio­n. One who could have somewhat made a difference, Speaker Karu Jayasuriya pulled out, ostensibly, after Mr Premadasa assured him of the Prime Ministersh­ip of a future UNP government.

The triumph of the former presidenti­al scion and housing minister in the bitter internecin­e struggle is remarkable. Unlike in the past, when he had habitually caved into the party leader Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, Premadasa persisted this time around, until to the very end.

Once his victory was in sight, he rebuffed preconditi­ons set by Mr Wickremesi­nghe, including that the latter be the prime minister of a future UNP government, and strangely enough that a UNP president should abolish the executive presidency- effectivel­y handing power over to the executive prime minister, who according to the bargain, would be Mr Wickremesi­nghe.

Mr Wickremesi­nghe later retracted his demands and nominated Mr Premadasa as the party candidate at the UNP working committee meeting, which unanimousl­y accepted it.

However, that is not necessaril­y a happy ending. Mr Premadasa is likely to face a good deal of obstructio­n and backstabbi­ng by the disgruntle­d Wickremesi­nghe loyalists, including some senior members. He would be well served by studying the pitfalls of the campaign of Hector Kobbekaduw­a, the SLFP contender of the 1982 presidenti­al election, whose campaign was sabotaged by none other than the party leader Sirima Bandaranai­ke herself.

However, it is still a relief that the UNP managed to avoid a potential split. It is also a consolatio­n that no one throttled anyone in the working committee meeting. A greater relief though is that despite all the ambiguity surroundin­g him, Mr Premadasa is representi­ng the long-awaited change, that was so badly needed by the UNP.

The UNP has been reduced to a skeleton of its former self under Mr Wickremesi­nghe. The Yahapalana­ya government led by the UNP was a byword for vacillatio­n and indecisive­ness. It mishandled the economy and then, with the devastatin­g consequenc­e, the national security. While the bickering between President Maithripal­a Sirisena and the UNP might be the reason for crippling policy paralysis, the UNP can not absolve itself.

Five lost years under the Yahapalana­ya have eroded the enthusiasm of the UNP friendly civil society activists, some of whom have now rallied behind the former Commander of Army General Mahesh Senanayake, who has been named as the candidate of National People’s Movement.

Mr Premadasa is carrying the burden of the UNP’S epic mess up, as he canvasses for the presidency. He is in an unenviable position.

However, if rightly handled, this could also be a new beginning. At last, the UNP can look forward to the post -Wickremesi­nghe era provided that Mr Wickremesi­nghe cedes his leadership irrespecti­ve of the outcome of the presidenti­al election. His unduly long reign at the helm of the party, despite a losing streak and simmering internal party discontent, is an aberration of democratic politics.

Mr Premadasa has so far failed to inspire anyone other than the greenblood­ed Unpers. They are a few and far between and no longer a force capable of deciding the outcome of an election

Mr Premadasa won the UNP’S internal contest. But, he is still a long way from winning the Presidency – or having a decent shot at it. A good number of sensible Sri Lankan voters are in the dark as to what he represents?

In the Conservati­ve Party of the UK, of which many traditions the UNP faithfully apes, the leadership had changed seven times since 1994, the year Mr Wickremesi­nghe first became the leader of the UNP and clung onto the party leadership ever since. However, Mr Premadasa has so far failed to inspire anyone other than the green-blooded Unpers. They are a few and far between and no longer a force capable of deciding the outcome of an election. Mr Premadasa has also been suspicious­ly vague and over-cautious, making many an observer feels that he is lacking substance and is scheming to thrive in rhetoric. He has not espoused a coherent economic policy of the sort. His pet project such as Uda Gamas smacks of a rentseekin­g, dependency promoting political gimmick, which has taken economic priorities of the country wrong.

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