Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

2019; Go for a proper power- sharing model

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With the conclusion of an eventful year, climaxing with the dramatic events since October 26, one might need to anticipate another year where politics is probably going to take centre-stage. The President has told his dwindling party faithful to look forward to an election year. It could be any one, or all three – presidenti­al, parliament­ary, provincial.

The political leaders have been already off the starting blocks, best seen by the way the President gave orders to government agencies to provide quick relief for the flood victims of the North and East, followed by the Prime Minister who asked his ministers to provide quick relief to these flood victims, and then the (southern) Leader of the Opposition, not to be left out, suggesting that the Government must ensure that quick relief for the flood victims be given in an efficient manner.

Having given these “orders’ they went their own way – to Bangkok, Nuwara Eliya and Tangalle for a well-earned rest, and recuperati­on after the near two-month political circus they were engaged in. At least, on Friday, the Prime Minister visited the areas hit by the floods. One might ask the reasonable question -- would the government agencies that are supposed to provide this relief in normal circumstan­ces not have moved unless “orders from the top” arrived.

The country is bound to see more of these competing forces at work. It would not be a bad thing for the citizenry to have political leaders woo them. Come 2019 and it will be the voter who will be king and queen.

Elections are no doubt the life-blood of a democracy. Yet, they are not the be-all and end-all of governance. How often do people vote with great enthusiasm at elections, mainly for change, only to be let down and have their hopes of a new administra­tion delivering the goods shattered.

This Presidency is a classic example. The UNF- led Government disappoint­ed the electorate very early by its mishandlin­g of the Central Bank bond scam, and both, the Presidency and the Government began bickering in the open – and with the stroke of a pen, the President reversed the mandate of two elections in 2015.

Now, both the President and the UNF Government have a second chance to win back the lost confidence of their voters. They can, in fact, if they re-set their strategies, regain the support they have lost, especially in the rural hinterland.

There is some political pressure for an early election to some Provincial Councils that stand dissolved. That this pressure comes largely from the Opposition quarters is understand­able, as they feel confident of electoral success. They see it as a launching pad for the bigger elections that will have to come if not in 2019, by early 2020. The (southern) Opposition Leader, who originally opposed the setting up of Provincial Councils is even complainin­g that it is because the Northern Provincial Council is defunct that flood relief work is not properly coordinate­d. The (northern) Opposition Leader on the other hand, who campaigned for Provincial Councils, collaborat­ed in it being taken over by the Centre.

It is time political leaders of this country got out of this election syndrome at least insofar as the Provincial Councils are concerned. These councils serve neither man nor beast and even India that midwifed the system in 1987 under different circumstan­ces, may agree the system needs a fresh look.

There are fears, imagined and genuine, that a Federal system is underway as that fresh look. That is not going to happen. Instead, a proper administra­tively efficient power sharing model is something to consider in 2019 and not mere rhetoric of elections to prove political one- upmanship at the expense of civil administra­tion and economic developmen­t on a scientific basis.

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