Sirisena’s Last ‘Trump Card’: Sowing Discord In UNP & Engineering Leadership Tussle


In the days that followed, Sirisena appointed a number of Cabinet members to his purported government on a staggered basis and then dissolved Parliament, sharply contravening all constitutional barriers imposed by the 19th Amendment preventing such action by the Executive. He also attempted to engineer crossovers to solidify the position of Rajapaksa, but did not elicit a positive response from many of the UNPers he approached.
When the Supreme Court thwarted Sirisena’s first attempt to dissolve Parliament and hold snap elections, the President saw himself caught between a rock and a hard place. His chosen Prime Minister Rajapaksa, did not have the numbers to demonstrate a simple majority in Parliament, and suffered three humiliating defeats in the House – including two back to back no-confidence motions. As a result of this, the country is now saddled with a government lacking legitimacy and an obstinate President refusing to accept the will of the legislature.
President Maithripala Sirisena has now exhausted all his options – his “trump cards”, if you will. The UNP has stood its ground, throwing its full support behind party leader Ranil Wickremesinghe, and Sirisena’s attempts to appoint another UNP parliamentarian as PM through the ‘backdoor’ have proven futile. Even though Sirisena has categorically ruled out the possibility of Wickremesinghe being re-appointed Prime Minister, the President has little legal room to manoeuvre.
The current impasse is proving to be costly for former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his camp, which had seemed well positioned to secure a comprehensive victory at the next Parliamentary election, before the outbreak of this political crisis. As a senior UPFA Parliamentarian Kumara Welgama, a long time ally of the former President, aptly explains, the appointment of Rajapaksa as Prime Minister without the support of Parliament has brought a curse upon their own political movement.
The statement issued by former President Rajapaksa, this last Sunday evening, is also a manifestation of his current plight. In an uncharacteristically defensive statement, Rajapaksa said the government he formed on October 26 was only an “interim” government and that he would need more time to form a stable one. It showed the former war-winning President, who was riding the crest of a populist wave before October 26, in a hapless position in which he is made to apologetically explain his actions to party supporters.
Moving forward, Parliament this week will vote on two motions, that will seek to cut off budgetary allocations to the Prime Minister’s Office and other ministries, held by members of the purported Cabinet. The two motions are likely to pass in Parliament with a clear majority, plunging Rajapaksa and his camp into deeper chaos. In the face of this humiliation in Parliament and imminent legal battles over the legitimacy of his government, Rajapaksa will come under intense pressure to step down from his portfolio and resort to urgent damage-control measures.
In the current context, President Sirisena’s last and only ‘trump card’ seems to be sowing discord within the UNP, attempting to pit Deputy Leader Sajith Premadasa against Wickremesinghe in a tussle for party leadership. It is clear that Sirisena’s anti-Wickremesinghe advisors and the media tycoons working hand-in-glove with him have launched a feverish campaign to discredit the party leadership from within the camp. Sadly, a section of hot-headed and impetuous UNP MPs have failed to comprehend the gravity of the current political crisis, and may even fall prey to Sirisena’s solipsistic plan.