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presidency.
In shifting the presidential system from an executive presidency to a
parliamentary democracy, there are a few provisions in the Constitution
which require a referendum if they were to completely shift those
provisions. This particular amendment has been designed carefully not to
affect those. One has to understand that some of the provisions have been
introduced because they wanted to avoid the referendum.
In a presidential system we had the head of the executive as the president
who is also the head of the government and head of armed forces, etc.
When it comes to the parliamentary system, the head of the government is
the prime minister or the head of the cabinet. One major shift is that the
president remains as the head of state. But the head of the government will
be prime minister. There are so many countries with this type of system,
including France.
The second change is the president acting on the advice of the prime
minister. The cabinet is chosen from the parliamentarians and their leader
will be the head of government. Therefore the head of the state has to act
on the advice on the government.
But since the president remains as the head of state, he will be the person
who will be making almost all major appointments, either on the advice of
the prime minister or with concurrence of the Constitutional Council. It is
actually sharing the responsibilities. So even the worst president coming to
power cannot be bad because there will be enough checks and balances.
The president cannot dissolve parliament without approval of parliament.
The prime minister and cabinet as well as the president are answerable to
parliament now. That means parliament can have systems to question any
one of them.
There are transitional provisions too. The present President until his term
finishes in five years can be the head of defence or cabinet defence
minister and can also hold two ministries, Mahaweli and Environment. It
was designed in the Constitutional amendment itself. But after the five
years end, no future president can hold any ministries.
The 17th Amendment was brought in with amendments. 17A was the one
that introduced independent commissions. 19A will introduce additional
commissions. One is the Procurement Commission which will be appointed
by the Constitutional Council. The University Grants Commission will also be
appointed by the Constitutional Council. There will be an Audit Commission.
There are major changes done in that direction.
Previously there was a bit of a mistake with the 17A where once the
president is elected he is the one who can appoint the members to the
Constitutional Council and the Constitutional Council appoints the
commissions. If the president doesnt appoint his nominee into the
Constitutional Council, then these councils cannot function. Now there is a
provision that if the president is not appointing the nominees within two
weeks, then those members are immediately appointed automatically. The
president will have no say after that.
Then there is a very broad audit provision into this. At the moment the
Auditor General cannot audit public companies. For example if the
government has even 100% shares, because its a company, the Auditor
General doesnt have power to audit. That has been changed. Now they can
do all types of audit. They can audit public money wherever it is located.
Freedom of Information has recognised as a fundamental right. With that
they can soon introduce the Right to Information Act. This act cannot be
introduced without this amendment to the Constitution.
Q: What were the submissions at the Supreme Court on the 19A?
A: There were two types of submissions. Some petitioners argued some of
the provisions cannot be introduced without a referendum. The Supreme