Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Parliament­ary elections 2020: A Point of View

- By Professor Savitri Gooneseker­e

The coronaviru­s pandemic has impacted the lives of people in Sri Lanka and across the globe. The President and the Minister of Health have given leadership in responding to this grave public health crisis. Their policy and programmin­g initiative­s have been supported by dedicated medical profession­als and health workers in the public health system. Sri Lanka initiated from the middle of March, an intensive programme of identifyin­g Covid-19 cases, contact tracing, and isolation, considered the best response. Testing has been added as a major initiative in recent weeks. This is an impressive performanc­e.

However, unfortunat­ely, pressure has been building, to "open up" the country. This is related to the concern with holding the Parliament­ary elections on a postponed date of June 20, 2020.

The sequence of events

The original date for Parliament­ary elections was April 25, 2020, the date set by the President’s Proclamati­on (issued by Gazette Notice of March 2, 2020), dissolving Parliament. Section 10 (1) (b) of the Elections Act (1981) places the responsibi­lity on the President to set the “date on which the poll is taken” in every Proclamati­on dissolving Parliament. This provision restates the President’s responsibi­lity under Article 70 (5) (a) and (b) of the Constituti­on, to set a date for the Parliament­ary election, which also must not be later than three months after the dissolutio­n of Parliament. This is because the new Parliament must meet not later than three months after the dissolutio­n of the former Parliament. The details of these Constituti­onal provisions will be discussed later.

Section 24 (1) (c) of the Elections Act indicates that when the Election Commission publishes a Gazette Notice specifying the date of the poll for the Parliament­ary election, it must “specify the date of the poll being the date specified ( by the President) under Section 10,” ie Section 10 (1) (b). According to these provisions it is the President’s act of setting the date of the Parliament­ary election by his Proclamati­on dissolving Parliament that enables the Commission to start making arrangemen­ts to conduct the poll. The Commission’s responsibi­lity in this regard arises only after the President has set the date under Section 10 (1) (b). The President’s Proclamati­on dissolving Parliament, and the date set by him for the poll for Parliament­ary elections are both clearly connected.

The Government introduced curfews and lockdowns in mid-March in response to the Covid 19 pandemic. When it appeared that elections could not be held on April 25, (the date set by the President in his Proclamati­on), the Election Commission surprising­ly issued a Gazette Notice on March 21, stating that the poll could not be held on that date, and also that they would set a later date for the poll. This Gazette Notice of the Commission was in conflict with Section 10 (1) (b) and Section 24 (1) (c) of the Election Act referred to in the earlier paragraph. The Election Commission was therefore acting outside the powers given to them by the Elections Act in stating that it would set a later date for the poll. The Gazette notice was also in conflict with the President’s responsibi­lities under the Constituti­on as outlined in Article 70(5) (a) and (b) cited above.

However, the Commission subsequent­ly wrote to the President on March 31, seeking clarificat­ion on the date of the poll for the Parliament­ary election. It had become clear that the poll could not be held on April 25, and therefore, the new Parliament would not be able to meet on May 14, within the three month period specified by Articles 70 (5) (a) and ( b) of the Constituti­on, and in the Presidenti­al Proclamati­on.

The Secretary to the President replied to this letter, stating that the responsibi­lity for setting a new date was with the Elections Commission, and not the President. The letter referred to the Commission’s responsibi­lity to do so under Section 24 (3) of the Elections Act. It appears that it was in response to this letter from the Secretary to the President, that the Commission set the new date of the poll as June 20 by Gazette Notificati­on No. 2172/3 of April 20. This Gazette Notificati­on refers to Section 24(3) of the Elections Act, apparently accepting the interpreta­tion of their powers given in the letter of the Secretary to the President.

It is useful in these circumstan­ces to examine the provisions in the Constituti­on 1978 and the Elections Act 1981 that deal with this matter.

Elections Act 1981 and the postponeme­nt of a Parliament­ary election

Despite the provisions referred to above on keeping to the date stated in the President’s Proclamati­on dissolving Parliament, there are provisions in the Elections Act which relate to postponing a poll in the event of an emergency. Section 24 (3) referred to in the Commission’s Gazette Notificati­on of April 20, justifying the setting of a new date for the Parliament­ary elections, says: "where due to any emergency or unforeseen circumstan­ces" the poll for the election in any ELECTORAL DISTRICT cannot be taken on the date specified in the Commission’s Gazette Notificati­on ( and conforming with the President’s Proclamati­on), the Commission may by Gazette notificati­on “appoint another day for the taking of SUCH POLL” (ie poll for that electoral district). Section 24 (3) clearly covers a case where the Commission cannot hold the poll on the date specified in the President’s proclamati­on due to an emergency, such as a natural disaster or a breakdown of law and order, in an identified electoral district. This will be a special measure taken in respect of that district, in a situation where polls can be held in other districts on the specified date. This provision on a postponeme­nt of a poll in a particular Electoral District is connected to a general provision in Section 113 of the Act.

According to this Section 113, after the President has fixed the date of an election on dissolutio­n of Parliament, he has a special power to order an election on another date by Gazette Notificati­on “in any electoral district where owing to any cause no election has been held in pursuance of his order.” Section 113 refers again only to the change of a date in a particular electoral district. The section envisages that this is done in circumstan­ces where the elections are held in other districts in conformity with his Proclamati­on dissolving Parliament.

Both these provisions (Section 24 (3) and Section 113), clearly contemplat­e a change in the polling date in a particular electoral district because of an emergency or unforeseen circumstan­ces. The phrase “electoral district” cannot be interprete­d as a reference to postponeme­nt of the entire poll in a Parliament­ary election after dissolutio­n of Parliament. Neither Section contemplat­es a situation where the polls for a Parliament­ary election are held in all districts in the country at different times. Staggering elections in that way is not contemplat­ed by the language of Section 24 (3) and Section 113 of the Elections Act.

Consequent­ly:

1. The date for a Parliament­ary election after dissolutio­n has to be the date set in the President’s Proclamati­on. It cannot be later than three months of the date of dissolutio­n, as the new Parliament must be summoned by the President within three months of dissolutio­n (Constituti­on Article 70 (5) (a) and (b) and Section 10 (1) (b) of the Elections Act). The Constituti­on and the Elections Act reinforce each other and cannot be delinked.

2. The Election Commission has no power under Section 24 (3) of the Elections Act to set the date of a Parliament­ary election after the dissolutio­n of Parliament.

3. Section 24( 3) and Section 113 of the Elections Act on the postponeme­nt of an election in a particular electoral district in an emergency or unforeseen circumstan­ces, do not cover the postponeme­nt of a Parliament­ary election.

The Constituti­onal Provisions

Though the Elections Act does not contain provisions to cover postponeme­nt of a Parliament­ary election across the country by the President after the dissolutio­n of Parliament, or by the Elections Commission, in the event of an emergency, the Constituti­on of 1978 had already provided for such a situation.

As stated earlier, the Constituti­on has placed on the President the duty to fix a date of a Parliament­ary election when Parliament is dissolved (Articles 70 (5) (a) and 70 (5) (b). Article 70 (5) (a) reads as follows: “a proclamati­on dissolving Parliament (by the President) shall fix a date for the election of members of Parliament and summon the new Parliament on a date not later than three months after the date of such Proclamati­on.” The obligation to conform to this procedure is placed clearly on the President by Article 70 (5) (b), which states “Upon the dissolutio­n of Parliament … the President shall forthwith by Proclamati­on fix a date or dates (for the election) and shall summon the new Parliament to meet on a date not later than three months after the date of the Proclamati­on.” It must be therefore be noted that these Constituti­onal provisions which predated the Elections Act of 1981 set out the President’s responsibi­lities, and it is this legal position that was reinforced in Section 10 (1) (b) and Section 24 (1) (c) of the Elections Act 1981.

Another Subsection of Article 70 of the Constituti­on provides for a situation where, an emergency may require the President to reconvene a dissolved Parliament. This may or may not also require a change of the date for the General Election and the summoning of the new Parliament. Article 70 (7) states that: “If at any time after the dissolutio­n of Parliament, the President is satisfied that an emergency has arisen of such a nature that an earlier meeting of Parliament is necessary, he may by Proclamati­on summon the

Parliament that has been dissolved, to meet on a date not less than three days from the date of such Proclamati­on, and such Parliament shall stand dissolved upon the terminatio­n of the emergency, or the conclusion of the General Election which ever is earlier.”

Therefore:

1. Article 70 (7) gives the President the discretion to change the date set for the General Election and the summoning of the new Parliament in his Proclamati­on on the dissolutio­n of Parliament, only in the event of a grave national emergency.

2. When he exercises this power to act under Article 70 (7), then he must reconvene the dissolved Parliament.

3. When the emergency ends, unless a General Election can be held on the date specified in the original Proclamati­on, he must, by another Proclamati­on, set a new date for the General Election and the summoning of a new Parliament.

4. Only the President can change the date of the General Election and the date for summoning a new Parliament in the original Proclamati­on, and he can only do so by acting under Article 70 (7).

It is also evident that the concept of a "General Election," the term in the Constituti­on, is quite different from the concept of postponeme­nt of the “poll in any electoral district due to an emergency” by the Commission under the Section 24 (3) of the Elections Act, or the President ordering “the holding of an election in an electoral district” under Section 113 of that Act.

It can be argued that it is because the President is empowered by the Constituti­on to use Article 70 (7) and re-summon a dissolved Parliament in the event of an emergency, that the Elections Act 1981 did not deal with the postponeme­nt of the whole General Election in the country, because of such emergency or unforeseen circumstan­ces.

Conclusion­s

Both the Constituti­on and the Elections Act clearly place the responsibi­lity for setting the date of the poll after dissolutio­n of Parliament on the President and no one else. He must also conform to the Constituti­onal obligation to summon the new Parliament not later than three months after dissolutio­n. If he wishes to go beyond the date set in his Proclamati­on dissolving Parliament, he must use Article 70 (7) to postpone the election.

It is only by re-summoning a dissolved Parliament because of an emergency under Article 70 (7), that the President becomes empowered to issue a new Proclamati­on setting a new date for the Parliament­ary general election, which could not be held due to a national emergency. This Covid-19 pandemic seems to be an occasion for the exercise of the President’s powers under Article 70 (7).

The exercise of Presidenti­al powers under Article 70 (7) in an emergency, must be understood in the context of responsibi­lities of governance of two important institutio­ns - ie Parliament and the President. Article 4 (a) and (b) of the Constituti­on clarify the balance of Presidenti­al and Parliament­ary rights and responsibi­lities of two institutio­ns which reflect the sovereignt­y of the People. Article 33A in particular states that the President has an obligation “to be responsibl­e to Parliament for due exercise of his powers, duties and functions under the Constituti­on or any written law.” This suggests that it is contrary to the concept of the sovereignt­y of the People exercised through the institutio­ns of Parliament and the Executive Presidency that the President functions after the dissolutio­n of Parliament for an indefinite time during an emergency as the sole executive authority in government. Article 70 on the dissolutio­n of Parliament does not contemplat­e the President governing for an indefinite length of time without reference to Parliament.

The President also has a duty under the Constituti­on Article 33 (1) (d), "on the advice of the Election Commission to ensure the creation of proper conditions for the conduct of free and fair elections." The Elections Commission’s role is therefore not to take over the responsibi­lities of the President under the Elections Act, but to help him implement, rather than avoid, responsibi­lities under the Act and the Constituti­on.

The public interest

The re- summoning of the dissolved Parliament, to cover a period of national emergency like the Coronaviru­s pandemic, is in the public interest, as well as the President’s interest. It promotes public confidence that he is adhering to the norms of constituti­onal and accountabl­e governance in the exercise of his powers under Article 70 (7) in a national emergency like the Coronaviru­s pandemic.

When the President acts in conformity with Article 70 (7) in a situation where the Elections Act does not cover the current issue of holding postponed Parliament­ary elections due to the pandemic, the public has a right to expect a reconvened Parliament to conduct itself with dignity and a sense of responsibi­lity. The challenges of the pandemic demand an all-party consensus to help the nation to overcome the crisis. This is no time for the usual shouts and screams of confrontat­ional politics or all too familiar conspiracy theories. Indeed some Commonweal­th countries with Parliament­ary systems of governance have witnessed the total co-operation of all parties across the spectrum in helping the government to respond to the pandemic. Perhaps this is a required response, in reimaginin­g governance after the debilitati­ng pandemic.

A reconvened Parliament will have a limited objective, and that is to support the President and the government to continue with an effective public health response, facilitati­ng the allocation of necessary financial resources to do so. The dynamics of the coronaviru­s pandemic will require very limited sittings of Parliament, with a very limited number of Members of Parliament from both Government and the Opposition at Parliament­ary sessions. It will be clear that routine sittings will not be possible, nor can there be a recommence­ment of the usual agendas and procedures. However, important issues of national concern can be brought before the Parliament at these sittings.

Picking up the lives of citizens and strengthen­ing governance to address the grave economic and public health problems we face will require new approaches, and strengthen­ing and not underminin­g democratic institutio­ns.

(The writer is Emeritus Professor of Law,

University of Colombo)

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