By
Malinda Seneviratne
Early
days. Remember that. Keep in mind also that in a 40-day run each day counts and
that ‘early’ can quickly bleed into ‘late’ and ‘too late’. That said, let’s
consider Maithripala Sirisena’s press conference on Friday November 20, 2014
where he announced he would be the ‘common candidate’ of the Opposition.
‘මෛත්රී පාලනයක්’ [‘Maithree
Paalanayak,’ meaning ‘Compassionate Governance’]. What a wonderful signature
for a campaign! Pithy. Easy on the tongue. Captures the entire thrust of the
project. Contrasts itself from what the
principal opponent is identified with. Brilliant.
The
candidate is not without credentials. A long-time party loyalist who enjoys
considerable support from the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, Maithripala Sirisena has
more appeal from a wider cross section of the voting population than the other
contenders, Karu Jayasuriya, Ranil Wickremesinghe and Sajith Premadasa (in that
order). The opening remarks, prefaced by a Dhammapada quote, struck the right
note. There was sobriety. There was humility. There was purpose. He sounded
presidential. Then it all went downhill.
RanilIt
didn’t help that he was flanked by two discredited politicians. Chandrika
Kumaratunga, Victor Ivan will remember, earned the sobriquet චෞර රැජින (The Queen of Deceit). In
eleven years, she not only deceived, but presided over violations not second to
any she charges the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime with, not to mention a sorry track
record with regard to handling the scourge of terrorism. Rajitha Senaratne is
hardly a heavyweight any more. Still, it was the ‘Maithree Moment’ and
naturally the cameras didn’t pan to those two has-beens.
All he
needed to do was thank those who made his candidacy possible, outline his
objectives and leave. He tried to do
more and ended up doing less. The
biggest blunder was to pledge the Prime Minister’s post to Ranil
Wickremesinghe. Unnecessary. Distracting.
In
essence, Maithripala was saying something like this: ‘Ranil can’t beat Mahinda.
I have a better shot. I will win, step down and hand over executive power to
Ranil’. Now if this was a project to promote Ranil, then the question is, ‘Why
on earth is Ranil not contesting?’ Maithripala seeks to win a mandate to rule
from the people. It is not a transferable asset. If democracy underlines this project (as he
claims), then it would go against the basic tenets of the idea. The UNP, let us
not forget, is a party that couldn’t come up with a credible candidate. Not in
2010 and not in 2014/15. Rewarding the leader of such a party is කඩේ යෑම (shopping, or acting like a
domestic aide who does someone’s bidding) to use a Sinhala term that has a lot
of political currency. It is as though
the වලව්වේ හාමුදුරුවෝ (Lord of the Manor) is getting a
village boy to pluck some coconuts which he, the Lord, will then sell and
deposit the money in a bank.
He could
have elaborated on the notion of an interim arrangement or a ‘national
government’ that presides over constitutional reform and thereafter seek fresh
mandate through a General Election.Instead, he reduced what is essentially a
regime-changing exercise into an individual’s political project. He dwarfed
himself. And his dwarfing got worse when Chandrika had her say. Hers was an
unqualified lament of the worst kind. There was no මෛත්රී there. There was වෛරය (hatred) and clear revenge-intent. Hardly the stuff that could bowl the
electorate over.
Now
contrast this with an alternative head table composition where the candidate is
flanked by Anura Kumara Dissanayake (JVP), either Champika Ranawaka or Ven
Athureliye Rathana Thero (JHU), Ranil and/or Karu Jayasuriya. That’s
formidable. In contrast, what was ‘on show’ on Friday was pathetic. Such a
panel would indicate the forces arrayed against Mahinda Rajapaksa. What was on
show was a bunch of disgruntled incompetents.
Maithripala
has to look and sound presidential and he doesn’t have too much time to do so.
He has to re-articulate the project in clear democratic terms where individuals
and their petty political objectives are completely left out of the story. He has to drop his liabilities. It is clear
that Chandrika Kumaratunga, motivated by whatever, played a crucial role in
this maneuver which some people already call ‘a coup’ (a bit early for that).
That’s it. Her role is over. At least in
the public eye. Someone commented on
Facebook, ‘each time she speaks Maithri loses 10,000 votes’. That’s exaggeration and not a substantiated
claim, but that sentiment does have currency. Yes, she can address a particular
voter segment. The problem is that when she addresses them, there are others
listening.
Early
days. He can still re-constitute his head-table, so to speak. Maithripala
likened Ven Athureliye Rathana Thero to Kudapola Hamuduruwo, acknowledging the
key role the thero played in the political upheavals that culminated in him
being nominated as the ‘common candidate’. Now if you have Kudapola Hamuduruwo
backing you, it would be plain stupid not to get the Hamuduruwo on stage.
Similarly, if he thinks an appeal to the SLFP and UNP voter in the form of
clinging on to Chandrika’s sari pota and promising Ranil the premiership would
do the trick, he’s sadly mistaken. Voice-cut politics won’t deliver anything.
There’s a campaign to be carried out on the ground and the likes of Harsha De
Silva, Eran Wickramaratne and Rosie Senanayake will not do it. Maithripala
needs active JVP support (meaning, not the lukewarm hurrahs that party gave
Sarath Fonseka). You can have 50 MPs
crossing over, but unless they become campaign foot soldiers, that’s just 50
votes you are assured of. A general sway on the ground will not necessarily
follow these political defections. Hard, tough, persistent campaigning at the
grassroots is non-negotiable. And here
the JVP will be a significant factor. Remember, also, that it would be wrong to
‘use’ the JVP. They must have a central
role in the campaign and they must have prominence in the post-election phase
in the event that Maithripala wins. You can’t promise Ranil the premiership, Chandrika
her pound of flesh and toss some crumbs the JVP way.
Maithripala
Sirisena has a case. There is widespread
disappointment and even objection to the regime. It’s not about Mahinda Rajapaksa alone. He is
liked. Widely. Despite his faults. It is not about the Rajapaksas alone.
Gotabaya and Basil may be resented by senior members of the SLFP, less for
wrongdoing than for what they effectively deny.
Few would deny that they work really hard. It is the Rajapaksavarun (let’s say ‘the
Rajapaksa hangers-on’) that are mostly resented. ‘Intensely’ would be the correct word. There
are not necessarily blood relatives. It’s the Mervins, Sajins, Dumindas,
Rohitha and the countless thugs and thieves in Parliament, Provincial Councils
and Local Government Authorities that are insufferable.
‘What is
the President’s greatest strength and what is his biggest weakness?’ is a
question to which a retired soldier who now works as a driver and who even
today says he will give his life to Mahinda Rajapaksa responded as follows: ‘ලෙන්ගතු කම. හොරු ටිකක් වටකර ගෙන ඉන්න එක’
(his affability or warmth and the fact that he has surrounded himself with
rogues). On Friday night, one of these
worthies shot at a political opponent. That’s not a ‘first’. It is just one of
countless examples of thuggery to which the President has for whatever reason
turned a blind eye and thereby creating, reinforcing and perpetuating a culture
of impunity.
That
said, incumbency, gratitude for defeating terrorism (which Maithripala himself
acknowledged) and sheer personal charm, not to mention all the usual
tweak-n-abuse we see at election time, makes Mahinda a tough candidate to
defeat. Maithripala cannot afford to
dwarf himself (vis-à-vis Ranil and Chandrika).
He has to understand that the President has almost full control of the
state and private media. In fact, Maithripala has to see himself as the Mahinda
Rajapaksa of 2005 and of course see his opponent as the Ranil Wickremesinghe of
that same election. Mahinda won. Barely. He did so because all the money that
Ranil could pour into his campaign was effectively countered by the one asset
that Maithri can secure: the people. Mahinda could do this because of the JVP.
Numbers. Active. Spirit. He could do that because he had in the JHU someone who
could write his manifesto (Champika Ranawaka). Mahinda had Wimal, but that was
a different Wimal.
‘Early
days’, true. They can fast turn into ‘too late’. If that happens, Maithripala
would be another Sarath Fonseka. Ranil would remain Leader of the UNP. A winner
all the way.
*Malinda
Seneviratne is the Chief Editor of ‘The Nation’ and his articles can be found
at www.malindawords.blogspot.com
No comments:
Post a Comment