The Sirisena Campaign Needs To Pick Up From Uva
The Sirisena Campaign Needs To Pick Up From Uva
The Sirisena Campaign Needs To Pick Up From Uva
greater proportion for the opposition, to see the required swing towards it.
The Uva provincial election was fought with way more weaknesses for the
opposition than the presidential election will be. Then the opposition was
not united. Now they are. Then the serious slippage of support for the
Rajapakses was an untested thesis, after the results and the breakaways,
it is now confirmed. A provincial election is not a government changing
election; a presidential election is a chance for real and lasting change,
both for good and for bad. Amarasiri Dodangoda is not a political
household name. But in 1993, as SLFP candidate for Chief Minister of the
Southern Province, he defeated the UNP and set the stage up for the
Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga, clean sweep the next year. Young
Harin Fernando may not have quite piped Shasendra Rajapakse to the post
in the earlier Uva provincial race, but he wounded them sufficiently and
exposed the weaknesses openly enough for, Maithripala Sirisena to seem
very likely to complete the job.
An effective shift in the balance of social and political forces in the country
There is an effective shift in the balance of social and political forces in the
country, post the Uva provincial council elections. The mere coming
together of the opposition to support a common candidate is in itself a
significant game changer. The absence of everyone joining the same
platform is not a loss, the support from outside is a common practice, such
as in India. The important thing being that that parties not formally in the
alliance are not running their own candidate and are especially strongly
criticizing the incumbent. From the Sinhala nationalist JHU, to heavy
weights from the SLFP, to the Muslim Peoples Congress, the JVP, the TNA
and General Fonsekas Democrats are all informing the country that a third
Rajapakse term is a really very bad idea. Add to that the Bar Association,
the University Teachers and other professional groups. Countering that
seem to be largely just the Rajapakses. In an election of the Rajapakses
verses the rest, they may find that unlike the low turnout and high mal
practice Uva provincial election, they may well not prevail.
Posted by Thavam