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Lessons from LG ElectionsPart 1 Number-

twisting game may be self-pleasing but not in


accord with eco
Hybrid system has hidden simple election outcome
Monday, 26 February 2018

The local government elections that concluded on


10 February 2018 have shaken the ruling United National Party(UNP)to its
foundation.The UNP had exuded confidence from all pores of winning the
elections at the ward level,exploiting the advantage it had got from a possible
split of anti-UNP votes between the newly formed Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna
or SLPP and the old Sri Lanka Freedom Party or SLFP.

This strategy again, according to many, was a machination carefully orchestrated


by its leadership for quite some time. However, its confidence was totally
shattered when it found losing almost all the wards it contested in the Southern
part of the island.

Had the election been conducted on the format of the pure first-past-the-post
electoral system that prevailed prior to 1978, its performance by all means would
have been catastrophic. But due to the hybrid system in which 40% of the
vacancies had to be filled on the proportion of votes which each losing party had
got, it ended up securing for itself2,393 members out of 7,654 or 31% of the
seats. This was pretty much close to the overall percentage of votes it had polled
at the elections.

Benefiting from manipulating the law at the committee stage

Again, it has been a beneficiary of the 60 to 40 proportion in the hybrid system,


hurriedly introduced at the committee stage to change the original 70 to 30
proportion in the draft local government bill.

Had this original proportion prevailed, the SLPP would have been the clear winner
at the ward level as well as the overall local government constituency level. In
that case, the current confusion over who should rule the local governments
would not have arisen.

A ruling party losing at the elections

The critics of UNP have been quick to point out that it was a mega defeat which it
had suffered at the elections. That was because it was the first time that a ruling
party had been swept over at a mid-term election.

The arguments put forward by them went on as follows. The ruling party had
commanded all the powers and resources to outperform the rivals. These
included the budgetary powers, police powers, bureaucratic powers and media
powers.
The practice in past elections had been that whenever the ruling party violated
election laws, the Police and the bureaucracy kept a blind eye; whenever they
were violated by the rival parties, the laws were enforced to the letter and
sometimes even beyond the laws. Hence, it was unthinkable that the ruling UNP
got itself ousted at the elections.

Free election process creating a level playing field

But that was also the making of the UNP-led Government. It had introduced
legislations to appoint an independent election commission that conducted the
elections independently, freely and fairly. Under these arrangements, the ruling
party, though it had all these powers at its disposal, could not use them to its full
advantage.

The laws relating to the display of posters, cut-outs, bill boards, hoardings and
even the use of electronic and print media were enforced by the Commission to
the letter. For instance, there were even reports of the commission officials
intervening when the media were accused of reporting certain matters unfairly.

Hence, the voters could vote at the election without being influenced by the
powers that had been enjoyed by the ruling party. In such a situation, it was not
unusual for voters to vote en bloc to register their protest against the government
in power.

Election results map showing SLPP the clear winner

As mentioned above, the election results map based on the first-past-the-post


system has been virtually monopolised by SLPP in the Southern parts of the
island. There are some isolated blocks won by UNP and SLFP but they are very
small in number.

Anyone who looks at the map would conclude that SLPP has been swept into
power in the whole island except in Northern and Eastern provinces. In these two
provinces, local governments have been captured by minority Tamil or Muslim
parties. However, the votes polled or the number of members elected by each
party does not show this result.

Accordingly, SLPP has polled 4.9 million votes accounting for 45% of the total
votes polled at the election. The corresponding numbers relating to UNP have
been 3.6 million and 33%. SLFP which contested either under United People’s
Freedom Alliance or UPFA or SLFP had polled 1.5 million votes which amounted to
13% of the total votes cast.

The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna or JVP had polled nearly seven lakhs,which
amounted to 6% and Ilangai Tamil ArasuKachchu or ITAK had a little over three
lakhs or 3%. It is these numbers that have led to different interpretations by
election analysts, political commentators and top leaders of political parties.
Why did the ruling UNP lose?
To the general public, it is clear that the ruling UNP and SLFP have been routed at
the elections. Their vote in large numbers in favour of the newly-formed SLPP to
make it the winner at the ward level could mean only two things.

First, it is a protest against what the Government has done or failed to do during
its three-year existence. Second, it could also be read as an endorsement of the
ideology that was put forward by the new party SLPP. Either way, it teaches many
lessons to those in power as well as those who aspire to capture power in the
future.

Failure to take note of those lessons and act accordingly would certainly be
catastrophic for the ruling UNP, on one side. Getting exhilarated by the
unexpected win and acting on the false confidence that voters would inevitably
return them to power at future elections too would be self-defeating for SLPP, on
the other side.

These are two pitfalls to which either contender at the next general election
scheduled for 2020 could easily fall. It is in their interest to avoid this by all
means.
Need for assessing causes for losing

It requires both parties to adopt a different post-election strategy. In the case of


the UNP, it should sit back and give serious thought to analyse why it lost at the
elections despite its superior powers over the rival parties.
The SLPP on the other handshould ponder why voters selected it to register their
protest against the UNP and how it could continue to earn that confidence from
them. But instead of doing it, both parties went on an enterprise to twist numbers
and posit a position favourable to them. Both these enterprises are wrong.
Number-twisting game

The SLPP used the numbers to show that it has received a mandate from the
people to form a new government. The UNP, on its side, tried to twist the
numbers to show that it has still retained its vote-base and the SLPP, led by
former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, has not registered a win at all. It even went
further to demonstrate that the vote-base of Mahinda Rajapaksa has been
shrinking compared to what he had got in his best contest in 2010. If this trend
continues, the UNP was happy to note that Rajapaksa would never be the winner
in a future election.
Social behaviour is unpredictable

These analyses done by both parties certainly help boost the morale of their
supporters. But they would not help them to win future elections. That is because
the twisting of numbers in this manner for personal gain is not in accordance with
hard economic laws.
They have to fight future elections in terms of hard economic laws relating to
social behaviour. Social behaviour, unlike a machine which would go on a set
course once it is activated, will be unpredictable since it is governed by complex
possibilities occurring in a non-linear world. Those who have twisted the numbers
have assumed that the world that gives rise to social behaviour is simple, linear
and could be predicted accurately. This is certainly a mistake.

Laws of Nature to rule social behaviour

Those who have joined the number twisting game from the UNP have added the
votes polled by parties which were sympathetic to the candidacy of the common
candidate Maithripala Sirisena at the historic presidential election in January
2015. At this election, the incumbent president Mahinda Rajapaksa was defeated
despite that all the odds being in his favour throughout. Those who have rallied
around Sirisena managed to defeat Rajapaksa by a majority of some four lakh
votes.

This is an event in social behaviour and it is illogical to expect that it would be


repeated or not repeated in subsequent elections. It will depend on many factors
that are enshrined in what is known as the Laws of Nature. These laws are
different from the laws of people or laws of legislators. While the latter category
can be controlled or changed at will, the former will occur naturally with the
configuration of the right conditions at appropriate times.

There are four such Laws of Nature occurring one after the other and one leading
to the other.

Law of Impermanence

The first is the law of impermanence depicting that nature does not uphold
permanent existence of anything. Everything under the sun is subject to
continuous change: they occur, exist and die. Social behaviour is also subject to
this law. Social movements arise, exist and finally die away. Hence, the outcome
of the election in January 2015 was such social movement: it occurred, existed
and died away. Similarly, the outcome of the local government election of 2018
has occurred, existed and will soon die away. They cannot be used to predict how
people will vote at future elections.

Law of cause and effect

The second Law of Nature is the law of cause and effect. Everything under the sun
occurs due to a cause. That cause then gives rise to an effect. Then that effect
gives birth to another cause. And that cause leads to another effect. In this
manner, it is a chain of causes and effects that governs all natural things in the
world. And the subsequent effects are different from initial effects. Eventually,
what becomes of the natural world is completely different from how it started at
the beginning.

Law of evolution

This cause and effect then brings forth another Law of Nature, known as the law
of evolution. Evolution does not generate a completely new one; nor does it
generate a completely different one either. Both what was there before and what
is there after are linked together like the links of a chain. But they are in essence
substantially different from each other. This is therefore the logical outcome of
the two other laws discussed previously, namely, the law of impermanence and
the law of cause and effect.

The message it gives is that nothing remains permanent and everything is subject
to continuous change.

Law of unity

The fourth law of Nature is the law of unity, meaning that though we as laymen
make discriminations about what is around us, there is only one unique feature in
nature. Therefore, one cannot say whether what has evolved is good or bad. It
happens as to how every cause has given rise to effect and every effect has in
turn become a cause for another event.
Results change when time is allowed to pass

Now back to the game of number twisting made by political leaders and some
election analysts. They have assumed essentially a social event fixed in time. The
local government election in which people participated happened to be a social
event that has occurred at a particular point in time. To assume that it would be
repeated subsequently is simply ignoring the prevalence of the Laws of Nature.

When one allows the clock to tick, which economists have named allowing the
dynamic world to rule us, all the four laws gets activated automatically. Then the
election results become impermanent, give rise to a series of causes and effects
leading to a continuous evolution of things around us and settling finally at a
point where we are unable to say whether the latest outcome is good or bad.

If we also have evolved along with the evolution of the natural things, surely we
would find the evolved thing acceptable at that particular point of time. Then
again it becomes impermanent, driven by causes and effects leading to another
evolved state. This is a chain and that chain cannot be controlled or checked by
the laws of people.
Why doesn’t the crème admitted to universities pass out with first classes?
This could be illustrated by means of an example. Universities in Sri Lanka admit
the crème of the students who have passed the admission examination, the GCE
Advanced Level examination. If this social event is repeated, all these students
should pass out from universities with first classes.

The experience shows that only about 5% of them would accomplish that feat.
Why is it? That is because when dynamic dimension is allowed to play, these
students are all subject of the Laws of Nature. They would rearrange their social
behaviour and the final performance would be completely different from their
original performance at the AL exam.

Today’s winner will not necessarily be the winner tomorrow

Elections also occurring with time intervals will display this phenomenon.
Accordingly, today’s winner will not be the winner at an election that would be
held in, say, some two to three years’ time.
By that time social behaviour will be rearranged giving rise to a new set of
outcomes. However, if there is an election immediately after the just concluded
local government elections, its results would be substantially influenced by the
outcome of the local government election. That was the rationale behind the
SLPP calling for a general election immediately and the rationale behind the ruling
UNP trying to buy time by ignoring that call.
Stop number twisting and go into serious analysis for the causes of losing
Thus, the number twisting game played by leading politicians is simply an exercise
done to gain self-satisfaction. Instead of investing their time in this unproductive
enterprise, they should have gone into the causes for the losses or gains and the
resultant effects of such causes. The correct identification of this process would
certainly help them to master the correct strategies to face the subsequent
elections.
In the next part we will look at why the UNP lost and the SLPP won.
(W.A.Wijewardena, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka,
In the next part we will look at why the UNP lost and the SLPP won.

Posted by Thavam

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