Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, November 25, 2016

SRI LANKA: THE STRICTEST ACTION MUST BE TAKEN WITHOUT DELAY TO STOP HATE SPEECH – CBK

chandrikakumaratunga-kfnh-621x414livemint

Sri Lanka Brief25/11/2016

Issuing a statement as  the Chairperson, Office for National Unity and Reconciliation, Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga  says that The strictest action must be taken without delay, against persons or groups who act to provoke disharmony by creating divisions among citizens along ethnic and religious lines.

The full statement follows:

The Office for National Unity and Reconciliation (ONUR) notes with concern, the rise of hate speech in Sri Lanka in the recent past, which challenges the initiatives being taken by the government to heal our country after decades of bloodshed and destruction.

Hate filled expressions and actions by groups with vested interests, resulting in demeaning, denigrating and inciting violence against fellow citizens of various ethnic, religious backgrounds has no place in Sri Lankan society.

For the first time in contemporary Sri Lanka, the Government has a stated vision to build One United Nation by promoting Reconciliation and a lasting Peace. The Government is working towards bringing about reconciliation among all communities, making it the highest priority.

This is in contrast to the years before 2015 where power brokers in the state fomented communal and ethnic hatred, shielded by a culture of impunity, thereby inciting racism and violence against fellow Sri Lankans.

The Government and the people of Sri Lanka are presently engaged in the noble task of rebuilding a society in which Good Governance prevails. The challenges faced in realising this are immense. Yet, the new opportunities that have opened up and the favourable socio-political context created since January 2015 must be seized.

The active participation and leadership of ALL patriotic Sri Lankans is essential for the achievement of Reconciliation, Peace and honest, effective, people friendly Governance if we are to attain political stability, economic growth and progress we so richly deserve as a Nation. We must work towards acknowledging the differences and celebrating the richness of diversity in our multi-ethnic, multi-religious country.

Short, medium and long term efforts are underway to address the grievances of all communities and to build a sense of respect, equality and pride in every citizen, living in an inclusive Sri Lanka where each person has the opportunity to enjoy the freedoms that are the right of all citizens.

The strictest action must be taken without delay, against persons or groups who act to provoke disharmony by creating divisions among citizens along ethnic and religious lines. President Maithripala Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickrmasinghe and the entire government have categorically reiterated that hate speech will not be tolerated.

We welcome the proactive actions by civil society and religious leaders in countering the attempts to spread hate by very small yet vocal groups.

ONUR, while appreciating the arrest of two individuals from two different communities, accused of hate speech and for inciting racism, urges the relevant authorities to take appropriate action against all such incidents regardless of the social status, ethnic / religious background or political affiliations of the perpetrators.

We note that there are numerous complaints against hate speech and incitement to racism where strong evidence is available yet investigations and prosecutions are pending for some time. We urge the law enforcement authorities to take early action on all these incidents.

We welcome His Excellency the President and the Hon. Prime Minister’s unequivocal statements that we cannot permit racist or extremist elements from any community to challenge or imperil our chosen path to a stable, prosperous and plural Sri Lanka.

We appeal to all Sri Lankan’s to engage with the Government to realise this goal.

Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga ,
Chairperson, Office for National Unity and Reconciliation

Statement by ONUR on the Rise of Hate Speech in the Recent Past/     25 November 2016
Sri Lanka’s biggest hypocrites!


logountitled-1Saturday, 26 November 2016

We are all hypocrites, more or less. These people top the chart.

1. Animal lovers...

...who fight for the rights of selected animal species. We protest bull races, but love watching horse races in Nuwara Eliya. We can’t bear the sight of chains around the feet of elephants but walk our dogs with chains around the necks. We condemn dog meat but don’t think twice before wrapping our two tongues around goat meat. We ceremoniously release caged birds and then barbecue some chicken wings for the after-party. We fight against caging animals, but boast about our gigantic fish tank at home or office. The Buddhists who chant and meditate for hours wishing utmost love and compassion for all animals, and immediately afterwards gulp down chicken curry and fish cutlets are the worst of this kind. And we sure have some mind-boggling philosophical explanations to justify it.

2. Women’s rights activists...

...who care about only some women’s rights. We speak with heavy voices at conferences about how girls are being raped every day in Sri Lanka, but are nowhere to be found when Islamic extremists violently demand in public for the right to marry underage girls! I mean here are the culprits hands-down right in your face! How much worse can it get? Yet no candlelight vigils for Muslim girls. We fight against banning mothers wearing mini-skirts to schools but never say a word about forcing Muslim women to cover every inch of their body. We accuse men for not giving women equal rights in the workplace, but I have seen some of those very women doing everything in their power to stop the promotion of another woman.

3. Anti-racists

These people are the most dangerous because this is their job. We protest Sinhala-Buddhist extremism but never say a word against Tamil-Hindu extremists or Islamic extremists. We are offended by the loud chanting at Buddhist temples but are deaf to the daily call for prayers at mosques. We fight against the Sinhala people who are fighting against being forced to leave their homes but dare say a word against the Muslims who are forcing the Tamils from their lands. We fight to take back the lands of the Tamil people but conveniently forget the thousands of Muslims that were chased away from their lands by the Tamil terrorists.

4. Politicians

I remember watching Dr. Harsha de Silva sitting in the audience at a CEO forum aggressively criticising Ajith Nivard Cabral, the then Governor of the Central Bank just on the definition of inflation. And now the same person is aggressively speaking in favour of another Governor, Arjun Mahendran, who has been accused of orchestrating the history’s biggest bond scam! Hypocrisy at its best. We have all seen how Sajith Premadasa comes on news dressed in white, with his hands clasped together, bowing down to village folk with a big smile on his face, talking so lovingly, portraying himself as the little man’s saviour. And then we all saw how he calls the same people to his bare-naked legs, shouting at them, humiliating them, treating the very people who voted him like his slaves, and discriminating them based on their height! It is now the people’s turn to worship and sweet-talk him. The list of hypocritical politicians is too long.

5. Youth leaders…

…who desperately want that UN job. We talk passionately about climate change at UN Summits but are very careful not to talk let alone do anything about the massive deforestation happening right now at the Wilpattu National Park, because we are worried it’ll jeopardise our reputation by speaking against a Muslim politician Rishad Bathiudeen who is accused of the single largest act of deforestation since the British destroyed over 50% of Sri Lanka’s tropical forests during their invasion. We create our own Wikipedia pages and voraciously collect brownie points for our CVs just before an all-expenses paid trip to some exotic location where people gather to talk and talk and talk some more. I have seen the blood-bath during those recruitment seasons as they stab each other in the back, in the kidneys and often straight into the hearts. What a drama. But it all fades away soon after they return from the trip, and get that job at UN or some affiliated NGO.

Sri Lanka To Protect Domesticated Elephants: When Do We Enact The Animal Welfare Bill?


Colombo Telegraph
By Avanthi Jayasuriya –November 25, 2016
Avanthi Jayasuriya
Avanthi Jayasuriya
On November 22nd the Cabinet approved a bill focusing on elephants kept domestically. The regulations that were proposed by Sustainable Development and Wildlife Minister, Gamini Jayawickrama Perera included also a set of guidelines that should be adhered to by those seeking to rear domestic elephants. Some of the main areas of focus underlined include,  formalizing the way to maintain the places elephants are kept, maintaining their health, responsibilities of their owners and caretakers, caring of baby elephants born to such female elephants, deploying elephants in work, reproduction, using for perahera and video shootings, and attires for elephants. This proposal also falls under amendments to the Flora and Fauna Act No.22 of 2009.
Speaking on the recently approved Bill Ms. Deepani Jayantha, Veterinarian, Country Coordinator of Elemotion said, “Some of Sri Lanka’s recent developments and steps taken on securing elephant conservation and welfare is commendable. But with legislation, there is also the need for enforcement. I hope the implementation of the proposed Bill for the protection of elephants will come into effect soon.”elephants in Sri Lanka
While due appreciation is given to the positive change towards the treatment of elephants by seeking to prevent them from being subjected to cruelty, it also needs to be noted that it has been almost a year since the Cabinet approval for the draft Animal Welfare Bill was received. Unfortunately the Bill still remains at the Legal Draftsman’s office while many animal welfare activists eagerly await its enactment. Almost a decade in the making, the draft bill was approved by the Cabinet following the public consultation that was last held in 2015. Following the proposed changes received by the public consultation, the Cabinet approval for the Bill was received on January 13, 2016. There onwards the Bill was passed to the legal draftsman for the changes to be incorporated into the Bill, and for it to be drafted with the changes included.
The last amendment to the law addressing cruelty to animals that Sri Lanka has seen, was in 1955. The Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Ordinance of 1907 under which welfare of animals is taken into consideration is over a century old, with outdated fines, and the implementation being on a rare occasion and therefore, is in need of urgent reforms.

CaFFE blows whistle on attempt to remove NIC chief for opposing racket

CaFFE blows whistle on attempt to remove NIC chief for opposing racket

Nov 25, 2016

The government had sought Cabinet approval to remove Department of Registration of Persons Commissioner General R. M.S. Sarath Kuamara for refusing to award a tender illegally to a company nominated by a minister to take photographs for the proposed electronic identity cards, Keerthi Tennakoon, Executive Director of CaFFE said at a news conference organised by the Anti-Corruption Front at Welikadawatte, Rajagiriya,

The CaFFE head said the tender board had offered the contract to the company which bid Rs 40 per photograph, but the Minister had ordered the tender board to award the tender to the company which quoted Rs. 80 per photograph.
 
"There are at least 16.8 million persons waiting to obtain the new electronic identity cards and the company backed by the Cabinet Minister will earn a whopping Rs.672 million if it secures the contract." Tennakoon pointed out.
 
As the Commissioner General opposed the alleged racket, the Minister concerned was making a determined bid to replace him with one of lackeys, the CaFFE head said.
‘Atha Kota’ and 17 other sentenced death over estate superintendent’s murder

‘Atha Kota’ and 17 other sentenced death over estate superintendent’s murder




logoNovember 25, 2016

The former Chairman of the Deraniyagala Pradeshiya Sabha, Anil Champika alias ‘Atha Kota’, and 17 other suspects have been convicted and sentenced to death over the murder of an estate superintendent. 

The suspects were sentenced to death after being produced before the Avissawella High Court today (25). 

Charges had been filed against twenty-one suspects over the murder, however High Court Judge Devika Abeyratne acquitted three of them. 

 The superintendent of Noori Estate, Nihal Perera, was hacked to death in Deraniyagala on July 05, 2013. He was assaulted by a group of men who arrived in an SUV while traveling on the road.  

 He was rushed to the Deraniyagala hospital in critical condition, however he had later succumbed to injuries. Two others were also injured in the attack.  

  It had been reported that the victim had been threatened by a group involved in a timber racket.


Israel fires: Netanyahu says 'arson is terror' as Palestinians help tackle blazes


Israeli security minister says there is evidence initial fire was started deliberately, 12 arrests have been made
An Israeli firefighter inspects the damage in Beit Meir on 25 November 2016 (AFP)

Friday 25 November 2016

The Israeli prime minister has warned that "arson is terror" and will be punished as such, as the Palestinian Authority pledged to coordinate directly with Israeli authorities to help tackle wildfires that are engulfing the country.
Hundreds of people were evacuated on Friday from Beit Meir, a cooperative village of religious Jews located in the Jerusalem hills, after some 60,000 people had to leave their homes in the mixed city of Haifa - the third biggest in Israel - as blazes threatened to consume the town on Thursday.

Addressing the crisis, prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that arson, or incitement to arson, constitutes "terror".
Wildfires in Israel, November 25 2016
"Every fire that was the result of arson or incitement to arson is terror in every way and we'll treat it as such. Anyone who tries to burn parts of the State of Israel will be severely punished."
His comments were slammed by the Arab Higher Monitoring Committee, which said they were tantamout to "incitement" against the Arab citizens of Israel.

: a   aircraft aiding the efforts extinguish the  over 

Netanyahu has come under criticism over his handling of the crisis, with some officials who spoke anonymously to Israeli news site Haaretz saying that the response to the wildfires has been mismanaged.
Israel's public security minister Gilad Erdan said on Friday that there is evidence that the original fire was set deliberately.
"It's already pretty clear that some of the fires are the result of arson," Erdan added. "As the prime minister said, this is terror by arsonists."

Palestinian Authority sends civil defence teams

Amid fierce controversy over what Israeli media are dubbing the "Arson Intifada," the Palestinian Authority said it will send civil defence teams and fire trucks into Israel to work alongside their Israeli counterparts to tackle the crisis.
Palestinian civil defence teams had previously been working to tackle blazes in the West Bank, some of them close to illegal Israeli settlements, but Friday's announcement means that Palestinian firefighters will now work inside Israeli territory. Israel has accepted the offer of help.
Palestinian fire teams previously worked with Israel in 2010, when a fire in Mount Carmel just south of Haifa spread quickly through dry forest areas. Forty-four people were killed, making it the deadliest forest fire in Israel's history.
An image shows the destruction in a family home in Haifa (AFP)
Egypt and Jordan on Friday joined a number of countries - including Russia, Greece and Cyprus - which are sending aid to Israel.
Around half of this year's blazes are thought to have been caused by arson, Israeli officials said on Thursday.
Israeli authorities have arrested at least 12 people, some for criminal negligence leading to accidental fires and others for arson.
One Israeli conscript is under investigation after allegedly dropping a lit cigarette in dry woodland, causing fire to spread rapidly through the forest.
Israelis drive past a row of trees being consumed by fire in the northern city of Haifa (AFP)
Israeli security forces including Shin Bet also arrested a Palestinian journalist for "incitement" after he appeared to call for more fires to be set, saying they were "divine retribution" for a new Israeli law that bans the Islamic call to prayer.

Anas Abu Daabes was arrested from his home late on Thursday after writing a Facebook post that appeared to celebrate the fires and call for more to be set.

Are Palestinians ready for Trump?

Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal and Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas head movements that face leadership transitions amid a dearth of ideas.Mohammed al-HamusAPA images

Omar Karmi-25 November 2016

Next year marks the 100th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration, the British government’s promise of support for a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine.

And 2017 could turn out to be similarly fateful for Palestinians.

An unknown quantity is waiting to move into the White House, a tweet-from-the-hip president-elect to whom Israeli politicians are already turning to clear the way for further settlement building in the West Bank and to end talk of a Palestinian state.

Palestinians are uniquely unprepared for this moment, mostly as a result of a lack of direction and leadership.

This is as true of Fatah in the occupied West Bank under Mahmoud Abbas’ increasingly autocratic ways, as it is of Hamas, boxed in on all sides in the Gaza Strip.

But where Fatah’s leadership succession is causing a host of problems for the party of the late Yasser Arafat, at least Hamas seems on track for a smooth process to replace Khaled Meshaal.
Meshaal announced in September that he would be stepping down as head of Hamas’ political bureau. A new leader is likely to take charge in early 2017.

He – undoubtedly a he – will take over a movement that remains structurally coherent but is short of ideas, dramatically weakened and holding a smaller regional hinterland than in the past.

Fatah’s leadership issues, meanwhile, are growing more acute with every passing day. The issue of succession to the 81-year-old Abbas is likely to be a top priority – whether openly or in effect – at a Fatah conference scheduled for the end of November. It will continue to rumble whether or not that conference actually takes place.

Absence of ideas

Neither side has any discernible strategy for moving forward. Hamas has spent a decade cementing its rule over Gaza while trying to maintain its role as leader of the resistance. Combining governance and armed resistance are roles that, as Fatah has found, are not necessarily compatible.

While the Islamist movement has survived three devastating Israeli military assaults since 2008, the violence unleashed on Gaza and a near-decade old Israeli-imposed siege has left the impoverished coastal strip on the brink of collapse.

That is not a happy record and these are the realities any new leader will need to address. Meshaal actually paved part of the way for a successor (most likely Ismail Haniyeh, the deputy leader, though Musa Abu Marzouq, a senior member of Hamas’ political bureau, has also been mentioned) by offering some parting criticism.

After announcing his resignation, Meshaal publicly suggested Hamas had made a strategic mistake in taking over Gaza, even if it came in response to a Fatah insurrection.

“We were mistaken when we thought that the era of Fatah has gone and that Hamas’ time has come,” 
he said in September, implying that Hamas had overestimated the consequence of its general election victory in 2006, and had not anticipated the extent of the backlash the movement would suffer in the West Bank at the hands of Palestinian Authority security forces under the control of Abbas.

Hamas’ choices

Regional turmoil has also played its part in weakening Hamas. The ouster of Egypt’s first elected president Muhammad Morsi, in a military coup in 2013, has put Hamas at loggerheads with a new Egyptian administration that has outlawed the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.

The fighting in Syria meanwhile, saw Meshaal relocate Hamas’ political bureau out of Damascus and to the Qatari capital Doha in 2012, damaging relations with allies in Syria and, further afield, Iran.

This all leaves any new leader of Hamas with major strategic considerations: does the movement need to choose between governing Gaza and engaging in armed resistance against Israel?

How and from whom can it ensure support, financial and material, in a regional situation that is unpredictably fluid? What steps is it prepared to take to forge unity with Fatah – despite Fatah’s continued security coordination with Israel?

And how will it respond to Israel, should an already warlike, far-right Israeli government feel even less restrained by Washington than it does at the moment?

But at least Hamas should be able to boast of an orderly succession, unlike Fatah which has descended into unruly disorder in the West Bank.

Fatah’s violent ruptures

The issue of succession to Abbas is now becoming a serious distraction, perhaps inevitably so since nothing else is happening in the West Bank apart from more Israeli settlement building and a clampdown on dissent by both PA and Israeli forces.

Certainly, Abbas’ stubborn adherence to a peace process that has long since run its course and for which he is receiving little to no support from international actors – the crucial linchpin of that strategy – has resulted in stagnation.

This crumbling strategy is plain for most to see. And it is causing ruptures within Fatah, even if few have spelled out any viable alternative.

These ruptures have turned violent. Nablus is at a boiling point, with Fatah-linked armed groups fighting Fatah-controlled security forces on an almost weekly basis in the northern West Bank city.

At least seven people have been killed in such clashes since August, including a female bystander on 16 November. There have been similar clashes in Ramallah and Jenin refugee camps.

Abbas’ fear that erstwhile Gaza security chief Muhammad Dahlan, now living in the United Arab Emirates, is after his job has played into this discontent and is fast becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Abbas is purging Fatah of people seen as close to Dahlan, as he ousted Dahlan himself from Fatah in 2011 under corruption charges that were then dropped in 2015. But he is not offering anything to counter widespread discontent in the movement except promoting the same old faces.

The upcoming seventh Fatah conference – should it take place, since it has been postponed numerous times in the past and the last conference was in 2009, the year in which Abbas’ term as president officially expired – is therefore likely to be notable for its absences.

But whoever is there and whatever is discussed, the issue of succession will be uppermost in everyone’s minds. Abbas cannot continue forever. Not resolving the issue of succession could just exacerbate tensions within Fatah.

Dangerous vacuum

Last month, Dahlan, who is supported by the so-called Arab quartet – the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan – denied he would run to become the next PA president. Instead, he threw his support behind Marwan Barghouti, the imprisoned Fatah leader who has consistently polled in the West Bank and Gaza Strip as the most popular Palestinian political leader over the years since Arafat died in 2005.

Barghouti’s leadership, however, would be largely symbolic. He has been serving several life sentences in an Israeli prison since 2002, and while comparisons with Nelson Mandela are tempting, it is unclear how he could unify Palestinians from a prison cell.

“We have a crisis of leadership among Palestinians,” veteran observer Abdel Bari Atwan, the London-based editor of Rai al-Youm and former editor of al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper, told The Electronic Intifada. “The problem is that neither Hamas nor Fatah have prepared the ground for a new leadership that can mobilize and unify the people behind them.”

It leaves a huge vacuum at a crucial time.

Whatever Donald Trump turns out to be when it comes to Palestine – no one knows yet, probably least of all himself – Washington has long been part of the problem rather than any solution.

And with more pressing global and regional issues, Palestinians are also likely far down the list of US foreign policy priorities, even as they find themselves more and more isolated, regionally and globally.

This may explain a renewed interest in finding unity after nearly a decade of division.

In October, Abbas and Meshaal met in Doha to affirm their shared commitment to overcoming their differences. Meshaal has continued to be vocal about the need for unity.

And Dahlan, who was unceremoniously ousted from Gaza in 2007, has previously argued to include Hamas and Islamic Jihad in the PLO, one of the key sticking points.

Unity alone is no strategy. But unity would seem a necessary precondition for articulating a strategy that a skeptical public can rally behind.

Political unity between Palestinian factions would also be necessary to revive a PLO that long ago stopped being an effective actor even as it remains the official representative body of Palestinians globally.

A renewed role for the PLO is vital to include Palestinians in the diaspora, who, after all, make up a majority of all Palestinians yet have found themselves with almost no say in Palestinian decision-making.

It could also see Palestinian political leaders take advantage of and lend their weight to global initiatives like the growing boycott, divestment and sanctions movement, BDS, that are gaining in momentum.

Something certainly needs to change. Traditional political factions already face being consigned to irrelevancy.

“There is a huge number of Palestinians who are now independent, a bigger proportion than those who support Hamas and Fatah,” Atwan said. “Whoever wins those independents can unify Palestinians.”
“As long as things stay the same – Hamas is losing a lot of support in Gaza, Abbas is hated in the West Bank – we are in a deep crisis.”

Omar Karmi is a former Jerusalem and Washington, DC, correspondent for The National newspaper.

Experts Urge Clinton Campaign to Challenge Election Results in 3 Swing States

Robbed?Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

By November 22, 2016

Hillary Clinton is being urged by a group of prominent computer scientists and election lawyers to call for a recount in three swing states won by Donald Trump, New York has learned. The group, which includes voting-rights attorney John Bonifaz and J. Alex Halderman, the director of the University of Michigan Center for Computer Security and Society, believes they’ve found persuasive evidence that results in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania may have been manipulated or hacked. The group is so far not speaking on the record about their findings and is focused on lobbying the Clinton team in private.
Last Thursday, the activists held a conference call with Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta and campaign general counsel Marc Elias to make their case, according to a source briefed on the call. The academics presented findings showing that in Wisconsin, Clinton received 7 percent fewer votes in counties that relied on electronic-voting machines compared with counties that used optical scanners and paper ballots. Based on this statistical analysis, Clinton may have been denied as many as 30,000 votes; she lost Wisconsin by 27,000. While it’s important to note the group has not found proof of hacking or manipulation, they are arguing to the campaign that the suspicious pattern merits an independent review — especially in light of the fact that the Obama White House has accused the Russian government of hacking the Democratic National Committee.
According to current tallies, Trump has won 290 Electoral College votes to Clinton’s 232, with Michigan’s 16 votes not apportioned because the race there is still too close to call. It would take overturning the results in both Wisconsin (10 Electoral College votes) and Pennsylvania (20 votes), in addition to winning Michigan’s 16, for Clinton to win the Electoral College. There is also the complicating factor of “faithless electors,” or members of the Electoral College who do not vote according to the popular vote in their states. At least six electoral voters have said they would not vote for Trump, despite the fact that he won their states.
The Clinton camp is running out of time to challenge the election. According to one of the activists, the deadline in Wisconsin to file for a recount is Friday; in Pennsylvania, it’s Monday; and Michigan is next Wednesday. Whether Clinton will call for a recount remains unclear. The academics so far have only a circumstantial case that would require not just a recount but a forensic audit of voting machines. Also complicating matters, a senior Clinton adviser said, is that the White House, focused on a smooth transfer of power, does not want Clinton to challenge the election result. Clinton communications director Jennifer Palmieri did not respond to a request for comment. But some Clinton allies are intent on pushing the issue. This afternoon, Huma Abedin’s sister Heba encouraged her Facebook followers to lobby the Justice Department to audit the 2016 vote. “Call the DOJ…and tell them you want the votes audited,” she wrote. “Even if it’s busy, keep calling.”

Hillary Clinton. (Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post)

Lawrence Lessig is a professor at Harvard Law School and the author of “Republic, Lost: Version 2.0.” In 2015, he was a candidate in the Democratic presidential primary.

 

Conventional wisdom tells us that the electoral college requires that the person who lost the popular vote this year must nonetheless become our president. That view is an insult to our framers. It is compelled by nothing in our Constitution. It should be rejected by anyone with any understanding of our democratic traditions  — most important, the electors themselves.

The framers believed, as Alexander Hamilton put it, that “the sense of the people should operate in the choice of the [president].” But no nation had ever tried that idea before. So the framers created a safety valve on the people’s choice. Like a judge reviewing a jury verdict, where the people voted, the electoral college was intended to confirm — or not — the people’s choice. Electors were to apply, in Hamilton’s words, “a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice” — and then decide. The Constitution says nothing about “winner take all.” It says nothing to suggest that electors’ freedom should be constrained in any way. Instead, their wisdom — about whether to overrule “the people” or not — was to be free of political control yet guided by democratic values. They were to be citizens exercising judgment,  not cogs turning a wheel.


Hillary Clinton spoke to supporters, Nov. 9, offering a message of thanks, apology and hope. Here are the key moments from that fervent address. (Sarah Parnass/The Washington Post)

Many think we should abolish the electoral college. I’m not convinced that we should. Properly understood, the electors can serve an important function. What if the people elect a Manchurian candidate? Or a child rapist? What if evidence of massive fraud pervades a close election? It is a useful thing to have a body confirm the results of a democratic election — so long as that body exercises its power reflectively and conservatively. Rarely — if ever — should it veto the people’s choice. And if it does, it needs a very good reason.

So, do the electors in 2016 have such a reason?

Only twice in our past has the electoral college selected a president against the will of the people — once in the 19th century and once on the cusp of the 21st. (In 1824, it was Congress that decided the election for John Quincy Adams; likewise in 1876, it was Congress that gave disputed electoral college votes to Rutherford B. Hayes.)

In 1888, Benjamin Harrison lost the popular vote to Grover Cleveland but won in the electoral college, only because Boss Tweed’s Tammany Hall turned New York away from the reformer Cleveland (by fewer than 15,000 votes). In 2000, George W. Bush lost the popular vote by a tiny fraction — half a percent — and beat Al Gore in the electoral college by an equally small margin — less than 1 percent.

In both cases, the result violated what has become one of the most important principles governing our democracy — one person, one vote. In both cases, the votes of some weighed much more heavily than the votes of others. Today, the vote of a citizen in Wyoming is four times as powerful as the vote of a citizen in Michigan. The vote of a citizen in Vermont is three times as powerful as a vote in Missouri. This denies Americans the fundamental value of a representative democracy — equal citizenship. Yet nothing in our Constitution compels this result.

Instead, if the electoral college is to control who becomes our president, we should take it seriously by understanding its purpose precisely. It is not meant to deny a reasonable judgment by the people. It is meant to be a circuit breaker — just in case the people go crazy.
In this election, the people did not go crazy. The winner, by far, of the popular vote is the most qualified candidate for president in more than a generation. Like her or not, no elector could have a good-faith reason to vote against her because of her qualifications. Choosing her is thus plainly within the bounds of a reasonable judgment by the people.

Yet that is not the question the electors must weigh as they decide how to cast their ballots. Instead, the question they must ask themselves is whether there is any good reason to veto the people’s choice.
There is not. And indeed, there is an especially good reason for them not to nullify what the people have said — the fundamental principle of one person, one vote. We are all citizens equally. Our votes should count equally. And since nothing in our Constitution compels a decision otherwise, the electors should respect the equal vote by the people by ratifying it on Dec. 19.

They didn’t in 1888 — when Tammany Hall ruled New York and segregation was the law of the land. And they didn’t in 2000 — when in the minds of most, the election was essentially a tie. Those are plainly precedents against Hillary Clinton.

But the question today is which precedent should govern today — Tammany Hall and Bush v. Gore, or one person, one vote?

The framers left the electors free to choose. They should exercise that choice by leaving the election as the people decided it: in Clinton’s favor.