{"id":76303,"date":"2018-04-07T23:10:07","date_gmt":"2018-04-08T06:10:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=76303"},"modified":"2018-04-07T23:10:07","modified_gmt":"2018-04-08T06:10:07","slug":"ranils-victory-unique-in-the-democratic-world","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2018\/04\/07\/ranils-victory-unique-in-the-democratic-world\/","title":{"rendered":"Ranil\u2019s victory: Unique in the democratic world"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em>by C.A.Chandraprema\u00a0Courtesy The Island<\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has always been good at brinksmanship and that is what enabled him to survive a quarter of a centrury of challenges to his leadership. He has been fighting off challenges to his leadership from 1994 i.e. from the very moment he became party leader and in that respect, there is probably no other leader in the democratic world who has the kind of experience that he has in fighting them off. That is his strength which enabled him to overcome the latest challenge as well. However his weakness is that he has a tendency to attract opposition and resistance in situations where most other leaders would never encounter opposition. RW has spent the better part of his life fighting crises that he himself created. Even in this latest episode, nobody should have been able to challenge him at all because the UNP had 106 MPs and with the TNA\u2019s 16 seats his position should have been unassailable.<\/p>\n<p>No other leader with such numbers would have been challenged except RW. The only reason why the challengers thought they had a chance of success is because there were a significant number of people in his own party who wanted to get rid of him and there was the distinct possibility that they may vote for the no confidence motion. With a significant group of MPs from his own party openly rooting for his removal, RW\u2019s moment of truth came when Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva told him that the unanimous position of the 44 SLFP parliamentarians in the government was that he should resign. If the 44 MPs in the SLFP group voted against him en bloc, then the UNP dissidents would have come out of the woodwork and RW\u2019s goose would have been cooked. This message from Nimal Siripala de Silva the day before the no confidence motion was taken up for debate was the moment that RW arrived at the crossroads and had to decide on one of two alternatives.<\/p>\n<p>He could either give up without putting up a fight or he could try to ride the storm and hope for the best. Even with Nimal Siripala de Silva conveying the SLFP\u2019s request to him to resign, the situation was not completely hopeless because everyone knew that there was a group within the SLFP who were looking to join the UNP as there was no real future for the SLFP after the SLPP swept the LG polls and became the largest political party in the country. So if it came to voting at the no confidence motion, RW could count on the votes of ten or more of the SLFP ministers in the government whose hopes of continuing in politics lay with the UNP. In any case, RW had nothing to lose but everything to gain by taking things right to the brink. If he resigned without fighting, he would have been out. If he fought and lost also he would have been out. So the choice was pretty easy to make. He would fight it and hope to win, and he won.<\/p>\n<p>Some sections of the UNP have been elated at the victory as can be seen from the firecrackers that were lit all over in the wake of the vote in parliament. However, no other leader would have been challenged at all with the numbers that the UNP and its allies could command if not for the pool of resentment against RW within his own party. That problem has not been solved by the victory at the no confidence motion but has been made even worse. The UNP dissidents took one step backwards because the SLFP announced on the day of the debate that they would abstain from voting which basically put paid to any hopes of the no confidence motion succeeding. However the resentment within the UNP continues to fester and if past experience teaches us anything, none of the underlying issues will be addressed to the satisfaction of the dissidents. This is resentment that has been festering for a quarter of a century with no resolution in sight. Even if all the dissidents in the present day UNP decamps overnight and joins the pohottuwa, their places will be snapped up immediately by the displaced politicians who find themselves in the sinking SLFP ship, and so the caravan goes on with different camels and porters but the same leader!<\/p>\n<h3>Open confrontation between President and PM<\/h3>\n<p>Indeed the experience of the UNP is unique in the history of democratic political parties. Firstly, it is very seldom that a democratic political party would have the same leader for a quarter of a century. It is even rarer to a democratic political party to have the same leader through a string of electoral debacles over a quarter of a century. The firecrackers lit to celebrate RW\u2019s victory should not fool anybody. There are a large number of MPs within the victorious UNP literally chewing their own backsides in anguish at the victory which has now eliminated any hopes of being able to bring about a change in the leadership of the party. In fact the mayhem created by this no confidence motion against the leader of a political party that had the support of 122 MPs to begin with (106 UNP and 16 TNA) is unbelievable. For more than two weeks the entire country was in turmoil with meeting after meeting between the various groups lobbying either for or against the no confidence motion.<\/p>\n<p>For the first time it also led to open confrontation between the President and the Prime Minister. There was no doubt that the President tried to get rid of the PM. In the run up to the no confidence motion, the President took away the Central Bank and the Securities and Exchange Commission from the purview of the PM and gave them to the finance minister. Then he got the SLFP group in the government to present a united front in demanding the PM\u2019s resignation. It was only when RW went to a vote that Sirisena caved in and instructed his people to abstain from voting. We all know what Sirisena expected to achieve by getting rid of Ranil and this columnist was the first to reveal the game plan \u2013 he wanted to have a compliant leader in the UNP so that he could contest for the presidency again next year as the common candidate of an alliance of political parties made up of the UNP and his faction of the SLFP along with any others who may join.<\/p>\n<p>But what did he expect by instructing his people to abstain from voting? An informed guess would be that he wanted to prevent his faction of the SLFP from splitting with at least ten of his closest loayalists including Diminda Dissanaye and Vijith Vijayamuni Soysa from voting with the UNP. However, by asking his group to abstain, he forced an even bigger group of SLFP parliamentarians to vote against the PM, because this group did not not see any future for themselves in either the UNP or the SLFP. So in trying to avoid a split within his ranks, Sirisena actually precipitated an even bigger rift.<\/p>\n<p>At the last local government election, Sirisena antagonized the SLPP constituency as well as the UNP constituency. Now he has enraged the UNP constituency even more by trying to take control of the UNP by replacing Ranil with a compliant quisling. Even the dissidents within the UNP who were in contact with Sirisena in trying to get rid of Ranil will never again join up with him because he sold them down the river by ordering his loyalists at the last moment to abstain from voting against RW. So when we look at the result of this no confidence motion it has sown destruction all round. Sirisena\u2019s SLFP is divided and in a shambles and is unlikely to recover. This was the second major blow that it suffered after the local government election. The UNP itself is once again a seething cauldron of resentment with Ranil being their leader for the foreseeable future. The UNP won with 122 votes. But these are votes that they always had. On the eve of the no confidence debate, the Tamil Progressive Front, the SLMC and the ACMC expressed support for the prime minister. However these are all political parties that contested under the elephant symbol at the last parliamentary election. The TNA did not contest under the UNP banner, but Ranil can trust the TNA to a much greater extent than most members of the UNP itself. So the votes that the UNP got were the votes he already had.<\/p>\n<p>The only real victory he scored was in preventing the UNP dissidents from voting against him. The no confidence motion presented by the Joint Opposition failed to dislodge the Prime Minister, but they have widened the rift between the president and the prime minister, they have created rifts between the ministers in the cabinet, they have saddled the UNP with Ranil Wickremesinghe for the foreseeable future and by merely signing a piece of paper, they have created the effect of a cluster bomb. The SLFP is definitely disintegrating and will hold together only so long as Sirisena holds the postion of President. After him there will be no SLFP. The present members of the SLFP will either be absorbed by the UNP or the SLPP. If and when the present Sirisena loyalists join the UNP, they being people who have wielded power in various SLFP led governments in the past two decades, will strengthen the UNP to some extent by bringing in people who have resources and a certain amount of political capital as well.<\/p>\n<p>The UNP\u2019s jubilant celebration of victory included surrounding the Sirasa TV station to light thousands of firecrackers to noisily convey the message that they won despite all the efforts of the TV station to dislodge Ranil. Obviously, this episode would have caused quite a fright to the staff there. However we never saw any of the usual media NGOs condemning the incident. If such a thing happened during the Rajapaksa regime, the American and British Ambassadors would have gone rushing in their pyjamas to the Sirasa office. However, being surrounded by a rowdy crowd and thousands of firecrackers being lit obviously does not qualify as intimidation as far as the Western embassies are concerned. Even if it was intimidation it was our blokes doing it, so it\u2019s ok, seems to be the prevailing mood.<\/p>\n<p>Even before the sound of celebratory firecrackers had died down, Tushara Wanniarachchi, the head of the Prime Minister\u2019s media division was writing to Colombo Telegraph arguing that only Ranil can win the next Presidential election. He argues that from 1989 to 2010, it was Prabhakaran who determined who would win or lose a presidential election and that at the 2005 presidential election, it was the boycott enforced by the LTTE that enabled Mahinda Rajapaksa to win \u00a0by a small margin. He argues that with Ranil getting 80% of the votes of the minorities who make up 31% of the population, and 35% of the Sinhala vote, he and only he can win the next presidential election. He says that in 2015, Sirisena got about 80% of the vote from the north and east in a situation where a survey had revealed that 33% of the people of that area had not even heard of Sirisena before. He says that Ranil may have won even the 2015 presidential election if he had contested. Thus we see the extent to which this victory at the no confidence motion has solidified Ranil\u2019s grip on the UNP.<\/p>\n<h3>The TNA\u2019s conditions<\/h3>\n<p>The TNA voted against the no confidence motion against the Prime Minister only after the latter agreed to ten conditions put forward by them. One cannot reasonably expect a political outfit like the TNA to vote against the no confidence motion without at least giving the impression to their constituency that they had wrung something out of the government in exchange for their support. The TNA is in a bad way in the north and east with other political parties making inroads into what was once their exclusive preserve. Even though the TNA is supposed to have \u2018won\u2019 the majority of the local government institutions in the north and east, all that means is that they have got more votes than the next party on the list, but they have been able to obtain an overall majority only in a handful of LG institutions. Even in the psychologically important Jaffna Municipality, the TNA managed to get one of their men elected mayor only after establishing alliances with other political groups. So there was no way that they could simply extend their support to the PM without at least the appearance of having wrung something out of him in exchange. The ten conditions to which the PM had agreed were as follows:<\/p>\n<p>1.Formulating a political solution to the north eastern problem<\/p>\n<p>2.Introducing a new constitution before the next election<\/p>\n<p>3.Releasing all the land held by the armed forces in the north back to the rightful owners.<\/p>\n<p>4.Releasing all political prisoners<\/p>\n<p>5.Investigating cases of disappearances during the war and paying compensation to the families of victims.<\/p>\n<p>6.Protecting the rights of the people of the north and east<\/p>\n<p>7.Solving the problem of unemployment among youth in the north and east<\/p>\n<p>8.In giving employment in the north and east, giving priority to people of the north and east<\/p>\n<p>9.In appointing district secretaries in the north and east, appointing Tamils to those positions<\/p>\n<p>10.Respecting the views of the two provincial councils in matters relating to the develop ment of the north and east.<\/p>\n<p>11.Giving priority to projects of the provincial council.<\/p>\n<p>Some of these such as the formulation of a new constitution before the next election are obviously not practicable. The constitutional reform process ground to a halt months ago due to the inability of the Muslims and the upcountry Tamils to agree to the devolution proposals put forward. It is very unlikely that this reform process can be resuscitated before the next presidential election is called in October next year. Even if it is, the possibility of getting a two thirds majority on parliament is now virtually non-existent. The demand to release all \u2018political prisoners\u2019 however gives cause for serious concern. What the TNA means by the term political prisoners are the several dozen hardcore LTTE terrorists who are still in detention awaiting trial. Even though over 11,000 LTTE cadres were released, these several dozen hardcore terrorists who are considered beyond rehabilitation were kept in detention to be tried. It is these people the TNA wants released as \u2018political prisoners\u2019. The problem is that they were never political activists or dissidents but the most dangerous terrorists in what was once formally declared by the USA to be the most dangerous terrorist organization in the world.<\/p>\n<p>Another extremely dangerous condition is the appointment of only Tamils as District Secretaries (Government Agents) in the north and east. This combined with the conditions that government jobs in the north and east should be given only to those who are resident in those two provinces, and that the views of the two provincial councils should be respected in matters relating to development work, would be an unprecedented move that will turn the north and east into a \u2018liberated zone\u2019 for the TNA.. These are conditions that the opposition should vigorously contest.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by C.A.Chandraprema\u00a0Courtesy The Island Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has always been good at brinksmanship and that is what enabled him to survive a quarter of a centrury of challenges to his leadership. He has been fighting off challenges to his leadership from 1994 i.e. from the very moment he became party leader and in that [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[6],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-76303","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-politics"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/76303","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=76303"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/76303\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=76303"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=76303"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=76303"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}