Sri Lanka election results – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Mon, 23 Sep 2024 04:43:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://artifexnews.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png Sri Lanka election results – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net 32 32 Anura Kumara Dissanayake swearing-in ceremony LIVE: Dissanayake takes oath as Sri Lanka President https://artifexnews.net/article68672775-ece/ Mon, 23 Sep 2024 04:43:08 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article68672775-ece/

Anura Kumara Dissanayaka was sworn in on Monday, September 23, 2024 at a ceremony in Colombo, a state television broadcast showed.

Mr. Dissanayaka, 55, the leader of JVP, beat 38 other candidates in September 22nd presidential election in a landslide fuelled by public anger over the nation’s unprecedented economic crisis in 2022. -AFP



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Sajith Premadasa gets highest share of Tamil vote in Sri Lanka polls https://artifexnews.net/article68671649-ece/ Sun, 22 Sep 2024 17:05:18 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article68671649-ece/ Read More “Sajith Premadasa gets highest share of Tamil vote in Sri Lanka polls” »

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Sajith Premadasa waves as he arrives at the election commission office in Colombo in Sri Lanka on September 22, 2024.
| Photo Credit: AP

Sri Lanka’s Leader of Opposition Sajith Premadasa, who lost to leftist leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake in Saturday’s (September 21, 2024) presidential election, garnered the highest share of the Tamil minority’s vote, data published by the Election Commission of Sri Lanka showed.

Mr. Premadasa cumulatively secured over 40% of the votes across Tamil-majority areas in the island’s north, east, and central hill country. Significantly, the Samagi Jana Balawegaya leader obtained more votes than P. Ariyanethiran, a “common Tamil candidate” fielded by some political actors and civil society groups.

Weeks ahead of the polls, prominent Tamil party, the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), pledged support for Mr. Premadasa, who drew Tamil votes in the 2019 election too, when he challenged Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Following the party’s announcement, some of its own members endorsed and canvassed for Mr. Ariyanethiran, reflecting sharp divisions within the Tamil polity and the main party.

While backers of the Tamil candidate argued that they had lost faith in the southern leadership and sought to “give a message” to the international community, others opposed the move on the grounds that it would weaken the bargaining power of Tamils. Some commentators even termed it a “political suicide”.

Posting on social media platform ‘X’ following Mr. Dissanayake’s victory, ITAK member and Jaffna legislator M.A. Sumanthiran said: “Congratulations @anuradisanayake for an impressive win, achieved without recourse to racial or religious chauvinism. Our thanks to the Tamil People in the North and East who voted for @sajithpremadasa rejecting others on #ITAK advice and showed the difference in the electoral map.”

On the other hand, fellow ITAK legislator Sivagnanam Shritharan said the Tamil candidate, too, had garnered a “considerable vote share” in districts across the north and east. “The common Tamil candidate has highlighted the weight of the Tamil vote, and those who opposed the move or others who called for a boycott of the polls will face the consequences of their actions very soon,” he told The Hindu.

Further, commenting on Mr. Dissanayake’s victory, he said: “It is clear that the Sinhalese people have voted for a leader who will stand against corruption and be honest, it is heartening to see that. We are eager to see if Mr. Dissanayake is able to engage with the Tamils, too, with honesty and sincerity,” he said, referring to the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna’s [JVP, Mr. Dissanayake’s party] history of opposing Tamil self-determination and the Indo-Lanka Accord that sought to address Tamil concerns.

University of Jaffna academic Mahendran Thiruvarangan said he saw the JVP’s victory as a “positive outcome” of a crucial national election for change. However, he contended that the party must introspect on its past more openly, including its role in “fuelling Sinhala nationalism” and supporting support the war, “so minorities do not view them with suspicion”. “They are also yet to make an explicit and strong commitment to power devolution which will be crucial to win the trust of the Tamil minority,” he said.





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Who is Anura Kumara Dissanayake, the new President of Sri Lanka? https://artifexnews.net/article68670472-ece/ Sun, 22 Sep 2024 14:03:36 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article68670472-ece/ Read More “Who is Anura Kumara Dissanayake, the new President of Sri Lanka?” »

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“100 % sure.” That is what Anura Kumara Dissanayake, Sri Lanka’s President-elect, said days before the September 21 election, when a visiting journalist asked if he could win the presidential race. His calm confidence could have had only one basis — the certainty that he embodies the change Sri Lankans emphatically want.

When Mr. Dissanayake, popularly known by his initials “AKD”, entered leftist politics in his student days, becoming the country’s president one day was probably the furthest from his mind. It was the youngster’s hostility to the state and ruling class that led him to the student wing of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP of People’s Liberation Front), a party of Marxist-Leninist origins. He came from a small farmer household that was not politically active. His father was an office aide in the government Survey Department and his mother was a homemaker.

His first cousin, someone he looked up to as his older brother or “aiya”, was already in the party. His cousin was killed during the Ranasinghe Premadasa government’s counter-terror to that of the JVP’s armed insurrection in 1988, its second after the early 1970s. Mr. Dissanayake was 20 at the time. The following year, he saw his parents’ modest home in Anuradhapura in the island’s North Central province torched for association with the party. Even as the JVP’s second uprising against the state saw brutal killings, including of political opponents, ordinary government employees and dissident leftists, the state’s response was many times more lethal. It was this firsthand experience of “state terror” that strengthened Mr. Dissanayake’s resolve to join and remain in the JVP.

Since the late 1980s, the party’s political profile has changed considerably. In its first insurrection in 1971 the JVP had an anti-imperialist and socialist character, aiming to overthrow capitalism and transform political, social and economic institutions. But by the 1980s, the JVP took a decidedly more Sinhala-nationalist turn, fiercely opposing accommodation of Tamil political claims for self-rule and India’s involvement as an arbiter when the country’s ethnic conflict exploded into war, following the anti-Tamil pogrom of July 1983; in which the party was falsely implicated by the United National Party government of J. R. Jayewardene (uncle to President Ranil Wickremesinghe) and banned for some years. After this revolt was crushed and the party legalised, the JVP’s course shifted in 1994 when the new leadership joined the political mainstream entering parliament. Mr. Dissanayake himself secured a seat in 2000 and served as Minister of Agriculture in the government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga Bandaranaike between 2004 and 2005. In 2014, Mr. Dissanayake was named leader of the JVP, succeeding Somawansa Amarasinghe.

Speaking of Mr. Dissanayake’s leadership style, fellow MP Vijitha Herath notes: “Our party adopts a consultative approach, it is not leader centric. AKD is a very clear-headed decision maker. He is very good at factoring in multiple views and taking the best decision quickly, in real time.” Besides being long-time comrades, and entering parliament the same year, Mr. Herath and Mr. Dissanayake were also together at the public University of Kelaniya, where Mr. Dissanayake graduated in physical sciences.

“AKD” is also widely regarded as a compelling and informed speaker. His interventions in parliament in clear Sinhala stacked with facts and figures often drew notice. He made a mark in 2018, as a fierce critic of President Maithripala Sirisena’s abrupt sacking of then Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe that left the country in a crippling, 52-day political crisis. The party moved two No Confidence Motions against Mr. Sirisena and was among the band of petitioners who challenged the move at the Supreme Court. At the time, Mr. Dissanayake argued that the JVP and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), then the main grouping representing Tamils of the north and east, should work together. “The JVP (or People’s Liberation Front) and the TNA represent sections in the country’s south and north that have suffered most due to the actions of the repressive State,” he told The Hindu in November 2018.

At the time, JVP had six MPs in the 225-member House. They were a small, but strong team in Parliament. However, realising that the party’s political fortunes depended on both expanding its base and widening its appeal, Mr. Dissanayake set up the National People’s Power (NPP) Alliance, with over two dozen small political groups, professionals, academics and activists. It marked the beginning of a third force, outside of Sri Lanka’s two traditional political camps led by the centre-left Sri Lanka Freedom Party, the centre-right United National Party and their offshoots. Youth from different parts of the country’s Sinhala-majority areas were drawn to the NPP that offered promise of change and new hope for the future.

This momentum prompted Mr. Dissanayake to run for president in 2019, against Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Some, including from liberal and left circles, opposed the idea, seeing it as weakening chief challenger Sajith Premadasa’s chances of defeating Gotabaya. They blamed him for breaking the vote against a “fascist in waiting”. Regardless, Mr. Dissanayake contested and received an underwhelming 3.16 % of the votes cast. The excitement around his campaign with large crowds at political rallies, did not translate into votes. In the 2020 general election the NPP, of which the JVP is the chief constituent, had its parliamentary presence reduced by half. It was left with only three MPs — Mr. Dissanayake, Vijitha Herath and academic Harini Amarasuriya who came in on the “national list”, a proportional representation system where additional seats are allocated to parties based on their national vote share.

The outcomes of the two polls were humiliating for the newly formed NPP, as well as the JVP that had bet on it for its political future. Rivals ridiculed them as the “3 % party”, to show their numeric weakness in front of a government enjoying a super majority. However, they kept up their opposition in parliament, criticising and challenging the president and his cabinet. The debilitating poll results prompted the JVP to use its strength – cadre-based grassroots mobilisation – through relentless political organising; while it also stepped up engaging the Sinhala diaspora in Asia, Europe and North America, through overseas tours facilitated by the JVP’s international branches.

At one level, especially visible in Colombo, the NPP was courting businessmen, artists, professionals and the middle classes who drew comfort from its new social and class breadth and moderated political pitch. While other leftists slammed the NPP’s focus on corrupt individuals, while evading structural issues and abandoning socialist politics, its leadership was unapologetic. “Labels have always given wrong perceptions. Left politics is not a bad thing, it is a good thing. Some people demonise this. That is why we say we are focussed more on working for the majority of our people, rather than on labels,” Mr. Dissanayake told The Hindu in December 2023. What critics see as ideological backtracking, it sees as political flexibility. 

No one saw 2022 coming. A staggering people’s uprising, the toppling of a powerful Executive President, and a clarion call for “system change”. The Janatha Aragalaya or people’s struggle was a headless movement of diverse actors holding conflicting positions, but they shared a frustration with the political establishment. Almost all political actors in opposition including the NPP were sympathetic, but aware that the youth were wary of being politically aligned. The JVP-affiliated student association was part of the agitations bound by a common aim to oust incumbent Gotabaya, seen as culprit-in-chief for people’s everyday suffering, in a testing time of critical shortages, long power cuts, and social and political disarray.

The citizens’ protest wanted the entire Parliament out, signalling they had no faith even in the opposition. There was a clear vacuum. A marginal presence in a tainted Parliament, some years of solid groundwork, and the dissipation of the Aragalaya offered the NPP a chance to catapult into prominence as the tribune of the people. And it jumped at it.

The NPP’s election campaign began early, and their rallies stood out for their impeccable arrangements and huge crowds. In Parliament, Mr. Dissanayake stuck to a formal attire of black trousers and a round-collared pure white shirt. At his rallies, he was often in jeans, and smart casual shirts tucked in with sleeves folded up to the elbow. His speaking style – beginning in a low, composed tone and then building up a compelling narrative against past rulers clicked. To many Sri Lankans, especially younger people, the NPP was the only option that seemed different, and “AKD” was the only candidate furthest from the political elite they despised. The Alliance became their vehicle of hope and Mr. Dissanayake, their symbol of change. An electorate grappling with enormous economic pain and political disillusionment, is bound to have high expectations from the newly elected leader. It is now for Anura Kumara Dissanayake, 55, to meet them.



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Anura Kumara Dissanayake elected Sri Lanka President https://artifexnews.net/article68671042-ece/ Sun, 22 Sep 2024 14:01:18 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article68671042-ece/ Read More “Anura Kumara Dissanayake elected Sri Lanka President” »

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National People’s Power leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake secures Presidential victory in Sri Lanka Presidential election 2024 on Sunday.
| Photo Credit: AP

Sri Lanka’s election commission declared a previously fringe politician the country’s president-elect on Sunday (September 22, 2024) after a vote coloured by discontent over the island nation’s response to an unprecedented financial crisis.

“Anura Kumara Dissanayake, the 55-year-old leader of the People’s Liberation Front, won the presidency with 42.31% of the vote in Saturday’s election,” the commission said.

Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa took second place with 32.76%. Outgoing President Ranil Wickremesinghe — who took office at the peak of the 2022 economic collapse and imposed tough austerity policies per the terms of an IMF bailout — took a distant third with 17.27%.

Mr. Wickremesinghe has yet to concede, but Foreign Minister Ali Sabry said it was clear that Mr. Dissanayake had won.

“Though I heavily campaigned for President Ranil Wickremesinghe, the people of Sri Lanka have made their decision, and I fully respect their mandate for Anura Kumara Dissanayake,” Mr. Sabry said on social media.

“Dissanayake will be sworn in on Monday (September 23, 2024)morning at the colonial-era President Secretariat in Colombo,” election commission officials said.

IMF deal

Economic issues dominated the eight-week campaign, with widespread public anger over the hardships endured since the peak of the crisis two years ago.

“Dissanayake would “not tear up” the International Monetary Fund (IMF) deal but would seek to modify it,” a party politburo member told AFP.

“It is a binding document, but there is a provision to renegotiate,” said Bimal Ratnayake.

He said Mr. Dissanayake had pledged to reduce income taxes that were doubled by Wickremesinghe and slash sales taxes on food and medicines.

“We think we can get those reductions into the programme and continue with the four-year bailout programme,” he said.

Mr. Dissanayake’s once-marginal Marxist party led two failed uprisings in the 1970s and 1980s that left more than 80,000 people dead.

It won less than four percent of the vote during the most recent parliamentary elections in 2020.

But Sri Lanka’s crisis has proven an opportunity for Mr. Dissanayake, who has seen a surge of support based on his pledge to change the island’s “corrupt” political culture. “Our country needs a new political culture,” he said after casting his ballot on Saturday (September 21, 2024) .

Around 76% of Sri Lanka’s 17.1 million eligible voters cast ballots in Saturday’s (September 21, 2024) poll.

Mr. Dissanayake’s party sought to reassure India that any administration he led would not be caught up in geopolitical rivalry between its northern neighbour and China, the country’s largest lender.

New Delhi has expressed concerns over what it sees as Beijing’s growing influence in Sri Lanka, which sits on vital shipping lanes criss-crossing the Indian Ocean.

“Sri Lankan territory will not be used against any other nation,” Mr. Ratnayake told AFP. “We are fully aware of the geopolitical situation in our region, but we will not participate,” he added.

Austerity rejected

Mr. Wickremesinghe sought re-election to continue belt-tightening measures that stabilised the economy and ended months of food, fuel and medicine shortages during Sri Lanka’s economic meltdown.

His two years in office restored calm to the streets after civil unrest spurred by the downturn saw thousands storm the compound of his predecessor Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who then fled the country.

But Mr. Wickremesinghe’s tax hikes and other measures imposed under the $2.9 billion IMF bailout he secured last year left millions struggling to make ends meet.

Official data showed that Sri Lanka’s poverty rate doubled to 25% between 2021 and 2022, adding more than 2.5 million people to those already living on less than $3.65 a day.

Thousands of police were deployed to keep watch over voting on Saturday (September 22, 2024).

A temporary curfew was imposed after polls closed, despite police reporting that there had been no violence during or after balloting. No victory rallies or celebrations are permitted until a week after the final results are declared.



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Sri Lanka presidential election goes to historic second count after no candidate secured over 50% vote https://artifexnews.net/article68670385-ece/ Sun, 22 Sep 2024 09:30:50 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/article68670385-ece/ Read More “Sri Lanka presidential election goes to historic second count after no candidate secured over 50% vote” »

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Police commandos stand guard, as a countrywide curfew was imposed then, outside a ballot counting center during the presidential election in Colombo, on September 22, 2024.
| Photo Credit: AP

In a historic first, Sri Lanka’s presidential election on Sunday (September 22, 2024) went into a second round of counting after no candidate secured over 50% vote needed to be declared the winner.

The latest results showed Anura Kumara Dissanayake of the Marxist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna party’s broader front National People’s Power (NPP) had won 39.52% of the votes counted.

Sri Lanka elections result LIVE

Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa of Samagi Jana Balawegaya is in second place with nearly 34.28% of the total vote.

Sri Lankans voted on Saturday (September 21, 2024) to elect a new president in the first election since the economic meltdown in 2022.

Election Commission Chairman R M A L Rathnayake said that Dissanayake and Premadasa have secured maximum votes in the 2024 presidential election.

However, he said that as neither has secured more than 50% vote, the second preference vote will be counted and added to these two candidates.

Voters in Sri Lanka elect a single winner by ranking up to three candidates in order of preference. If a candidate receives an absolute majority, they will be declared the winner. If not, a second round of counting will commence, with second and third-choice votes then taken into account.

Mr. Rathnayake said the new President will be declared elected after the cumulative votes and preference votes are counted.

He also said that the remaining candidates will not be considered for the preference vote.

Dissanayake, the leader of the Marxist JVP’s broader front National People’s Power (NPP), is leading in the cumulative votes.

The National People’s Power (NPP) leader was earlier heading for a clear win but his cumulative votes dropped when most of the votes were counted.

No election in Sri Lanka has ever progressed to the second round of counting, as single candidates have always emerged as clear winners based on first-preference votes.



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