Editorial:Message from Sri Lankan polls
April 1, 2014 02:39 IST
Keywords: Sri Lanka provincial council polls, Sri Lanka elections, United People’s Freedom Alliance
Keywords: Sri Lanka provincial council polls, Sri Lanka elections, United People’s Freedom Alliance
The elections to the Western and Southern provincial councils in Sri
Lanka, home to a third of the country’s voters, was expected to be a
walkover for the Mahinda Rajapakasa-led United People’s Freedom
Alliance. After all, the government had fought bravely against ‘foreign
conspirators’ at the 25th session of the United Nations Human Rights
Council in Geneva barely days ahead of the well-timed polling. In fact,
much of the election campaign made it appear as if Sri Lanka was under
siege and no one other than President Rajapaksa’s UPFA was capable of
saving the nation. But the electorate did not buy the whole story, the
voter turnout was low, and the results appeared puzzling. Local
elections may be fought on immediately relevant issues and the outcome
of a national poll may well be decided on larger considerations; still,
the latest results provide an idea of the country's mood. The UPFA did
win a majority in Mr. Rajapaksa’s home province, the Southern Province,
and emerged the biggest party in the Western Province that has Colombo
as its headquarters. But a point of concern for the ruling combine was
the numbers: the UPFA won 33 of 55 seats in the South — down from 38 in
2009 — and managed 56 of the 104 in the West where it had 68 in 2009.
More worrisome for the UPFA is the fact that it lost votes in the
President’s hometown, Hambantota — represented in Parliament by his son
Namal Rajapaksa. Clearly, people of the port-town prefer their district
MP, Sajith Premadasa, son of former President Ranasinghe Premadasa. Mr.
Sajith Premadasa has fought both the Rajapaksas and has a running battle
going in his own United National Party. This is the last round of polls
in Sri Lanka ahead of the parliamentary and presidential elections
scheduled for 2016.
Though the losses do not appear massive, the message behind it cannot be
wished away. The UPFA’s loss did not result in its main rival, the UNP,
gaining votes. In fact, there appears to be serious confusion among
people: they voted for former General Sarath Fonseka’s Democratic
National Alliance, which is now emerging as the third force in the
country, and also the JVP, which is re-grouping under a new leader,
Anura Kumara Dissanayake. The UNP’s vote share declined in Colombo
Central, its biggest stronghold, and it will have to double its vote
share if it has to emerge on top in a future election. Ranil
Wickremasinghe, the UNP chief who survived many bids to unseat him, does
not seem to be the leader who can carry the UNP into an election
victory. With Sarath Fonseka’s fate already sealed following the deal he
struck to be released from prison, people are clearly looking for a new
leader. And there appears no one in sight. That might be Mr.Rajapaksa’s
biggest trump card yet.
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