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dead ends
How revamped 19th A will block former president from returning to meaningful
position of power
magnanimously wished away that would have castrated the presidency, now lie
dumped on his doorstep studiously unopened, with the terse tag Return to Sender
firmly affixed.
Not that he planned it that way, of course. No, and God forbid the ungenerous thought.
Having made it his battle cry to do away with the executive presidency and to lead the
nation back to the parliamentary system of government, Maithripala Sirisena must
rank as one of the few men in history to have actually taken meaningful steps to divest
himself of power after having power vested in him. What can he possibly do and who
can blame him or take him to task if his efforts are spurned, if his good intentions to
keep his promises are scuppered by the Law Lords who held that those powers he is
desperate to get rid of and donate to the prime minister must, instead, leech like cling
to him until and unless 15 million people personally approve the long drawn removal
process?
Whilst others strive for power to aggrandise themselves, Maithripala Sirisena, this
political Sadhu Sumedha of Buddhist legend who gave away his wealth to anyone who
asked for it, strove to achieve power to become the spendthrift of the powers he would
gain. It was almost as if Heavens grace had denied his manifesto prayers because the
gods, having tested the mettle of his honesty and finding it not wanting, had divined he
was endowed so strong with selfless sincerity that he was worthy of the singular
honour of retaining and raising the nations Sword of Excalibur.
But the 19th Amendment Bill as gazetted on March 16 radically redesigned the role of
the Presidency. Though it retained the right of the President to appoint the Prime
Minister at his sole discretion, it sought
= to make the Prime Minister the head of the Cabinet of Ministers;
= to empower the Prime Minister to determine the number of Ministers of the Cabinet,
non-cabinet ministers, state ministers, deputy ministers and
= to determine the subjects and functions they would hold solely at his discretion.
He could also change any such appointments made without anyones by your leave.
He could also request any cabinet minister to delegate to any minister who was not a
member of the Cabinet of Ministers, any power or duty pertaining to any subject or
function assigned to such Cabinet Minister. And whilst it empowered him to sack his
ministers, it made no express provisions either for the President or for Parliament to
sack him. Once appointed, he could not be dislodged.
The sudden prospect of the prime minister enjoying
presidential powers would have jolted the former president
Mahinda Rajapaksa out from his retirement bed. Though
the desperate Gang of Three, namely, Dinesh, Vasu and
Wimal, had actively kept the Bring back Mahinda show on
the road, he would have kept on asking himself the
question: bring him back for what?
And then, Ranil Wickremesinghe unveils his proposed
19th Amendment, and presents the answer on a platter.
The proposed 19th Amendment as gazetted in March
Maithripala Sirisena: Supreme Court returns
the presidential Aces
(2), 44 (3) and 44 (5) in Clause 11 which attempted to transfer the Presidents
executive powers of government to the Prime Minister, was against the Constitution
and required the approval of the people at a referendum for it to be enacted.
The strategy for the Prime Minister to constitutionally enjoy far-reaching powers not
electorally bestowed had been defeated by the judiciousness of the Supreme Court.
But if the 19th Amendment has not closed the window to Ranil Wickremesinghes vista
of enjoying presidential power in the future, it has certainly brought the curtain down
on Mahinda Rajapaksas flamboyant hopes to return to any meaningful position of
executive power.
Whether the 19th Amendment is passed or not, the primary status quo of the
constitution continues without change. The President is the boss of bosses and the
cabinet of ministers, including the Prime Minister, are but underlings owing their
positions to the Presidents grace and favour. If Mahinda Rajapaksa glimpsed El
Dorado in the proposed 19A, the dizzy moment has passed and the cruel mirage that
had so entranced him has vanished without trace. Nothing stares back at him now but
a desert of shifting sands sans a rock to plant his mast.
Perhaps, Maithripala Sirisena himself felt emboldened by the Supreme Court decision
preventing the transfer of his executive powers to the prime minister, to display his
magnanimity and tell a pro-Mahinda SLFP delegation that Mahinda Rajapaksa could
contest the general elections under the SLFP banner. Whos afraid of the big bad wolf,
he may have mused, when the Supreme Court had allowed him to keep the axe? But
Maithripala was cautious enough to say that he would not name Mahinda as the
SLFPs prime ministerial candidate.
So what now for the former president? In pursuance of his aim not merely to return to
Parliament but to gain a position of executive power which he can use to stem the tide
of corruption charges rolling in against his own family and his cronies, is there any
road open to him that does not lead to a dead end? Would he, having supped the
executive feast not once but twice to the fullest and still had hungered for more to go
in for thirds; could he, whose gluttony for power made desire feed on desire and feast
follow feast, now be sated with a measly crumb that might stir and tumble from
of indiscipline.
It is one thing for SLFP members to rebel as they do now when the minority UNP is at
the helm. It will be quite another ball game if they rebel against their own party when
the president of the country, enjoying vast powers, happens to be the chairman of the
party and the Prime Minister is also a member of the party backed with his own
loyalist. Efforts by the Mahinda faction to create dissent will serve to isolate them
further. It will also lead Mahinda to another dead end.
Now take the extreme case where with a huge SLFP majority President Maithripala
transcends his phobia and appoints Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister. Had the
originally proposed 19th Amendment been enacted with presidential powers
transferred to the prime minister, Mahinda would have achieved what the people
denied him barely four months ago: Power through the back door. But this has not
happened. Thanks to the Supreme Court, executive power still remains withthe
President Maithripala and he is still the Head of Cabinet with power over all
appointments, ministers as well as secretaries of ministries.
While the honour accorded to the office of Prime Minister may still be there, the power
that makes it worth coveting it will be gone and Mahinda may well find himself
performing not merely a Premadasa peon role but, worse, the degrading, humiliating,
menial role he condemned D.M. Jayaratne to enact unashamedly for the last five
years under his presidency. Is that the fate to be the footstool of Maithripala the
self-proclaimed King of Lanka Mahinda Rajapaksa is searching for as he eyes the
same old eunuchised prime minister post that D.M. Jayaratne endured, which will lead
him to the final dead end of his political life?
The other way to power is through the presidency. The 19th Amendment, if passed,
will re impose the disqualification that existed, before the 18th Amendment repealed it,
for a twice elected president to be elected as president and Mahinda will be
automatically be ruled out. Even if the 19th Amendment is not passed, then Mahinda
will have to wait for another five years to contest which may not fit in with his game
plan, where time is of the essence, to possess power to the stop the probes.
Even in the instance where there is a vacancy in the office of the President due,