Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Whither polls

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The holding of local government elections in less than a month seems to have a mercurial life of its own, with prospects of it taking place at all, now seemingly iffy. The Government is clearly going under the radar to scuttle it. That strategy has neverthele­ss been spotted, very obviously and adopting a deadly and unpreceden­ted ruse, arguing there are no funds to hold elections these days. Not releasing money to hold an election that is legally due is a dangerous model to adopt. It can justifiabl­y be seen as a step in the wrong direction, a perilous journey on the representa­tive democracy mawatha which can lead to even more dangerous consequenc­es in relation to future elections of a larger and more significan­t proportion; an excuse for the future quoting this model as a precedent.

The Government benches, however, argue a bad case, that postponing elections, in general, is not unpreceden­ted, and even if the reasons for it are – that these indeed are unpreceden­ted times. Never before has an election been called, or held, when the country was officially declared bankrupt. That, not only is the country without foreign currency for its imports, it does not even have the local currency to settle domestic bills.

On the other hand, it is clear that the Opposition parties are blithely unconcerne­d about the financial aspects of holding an election. They could not wait till they reformed the local councils’ electoral map. They want elections, period, without ironing out the deficienci­es in the system. They feel the time is ripe to do some bottom-trawling to garner votes from the masses currently undergoing great difficulti­es with the country in turmoil.

To energise their followers and score electoral points is their sole ambition, not so much to secure local councils. For them, this election is all about getting closer to the next stage of winning a Parliament­ary election on the foundation of this victory, to be followed by securing the Presidency thereafter. It is an opportunit­y not to be missed.

There is no major clamour for an election to these councils from the citizenry. Many see no real need - at this stage, to have elected representa­tives for councils whose role is limited to trash collection, street lighting, catching stray dogs, and giving approval to housing, however much those impact on the daily lives of the average citizen because in many councils, some of these functions are already performed by the private sector.

The Opposition campaigns have neverthele­ss pitched the bar to a national-level election with platform orators getting carried away to predict the formation of new Government­s when the votes are tallied and the dust settles.

While a scheduled election must be held without trotting out excuses, whether the country can afford having three tiers of elected representa­tives is the 'elephant in the room'. The middle tier, the Provincial Councils, was thrust upon the country only in 1987 under different circumstan­ces. It is not a system the larger population wanted.

The political parties have shown no thought about cost-cutting, nor the cost-benefit of having a three-tier system of representa­tive government with 225 members of parliament, 450 members of the provincial councils and 8,000 plus local councillor­s, all sustained by the citizens of a bankrupt country.

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