Harini and Harsha, the tale of two debacles

By Kassapa
Despite most of its practitioners not being the most erudite or intelligent, politics is a difficult sport to engage in. It requires a different kind of nuanced approach. Even the supposedly more intelligent players slip up every now and then. Two did last week, one from the government and the other from the opposition: Prime Minister D. Harini Amarasuriya from the government and Dr Harsha de Silva of the Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB).
The Premier walked right into a trap carefully laid out by the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP). Its parliamentarian D. V. Chanaka inquired about the fate of the ‘SupremeSAT’, the rocket purportedly launched to please Rohitha Rajapaksa’s whims and fancies, when papa Mahinda was at the peak of his powers. The PM’s reply raised many eyebrows, possibly including her own. The project did not cost the state any funds and is now generating billions of rupees in revenue, she told Parliament. Chanaka couldn’t hide his joy.
This clearly exposed Amarasuriya’s naiveté regarding such matters. Given all the previous negative publicity for the Rajapaksas with regard to the rocket project where Rohitha was mocked mercilessly from election platforms, Amarasuriya should have wondered why Chanaka was asking this question now, if it had the potential to further embarrass Rohitha Rajapaksa.
If the Prime Minister glanced through the answer, she should have immediately clarified the statistics provided because it ran contrary to all what has been said regarding the SupremeSAT project until now. Surely, she must have realized that the figures she was about to read out would destroy the image the National Peoples’ Power (NPP) and other parties had so carefully built, that of the Rajapaksas as a clan of corrupt, egotistic rulers who acted as if the Treasury was their private property.
Amarasuriya did none of this. Instead, she read out the answers that had been provided to her. If and when she realized her blunder, it was too late. Social media had erupted, proclaiming the innocence of the Rajapaksas of all the crimes they have been accused of.
The NPP’s handling of the crisis was no less incompetent. They sent the garrulous Wasantha Samarasinghe to respond the next day, also in Parliament. He disputed Amarasuriya’s statistics, destroying what little credibility the PM had left. This only provided more ammunition for the opposition, who gleefully claimed the government was divided into the NPP and Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) camps. The SJB, perhaps intoxicated by their own lies, suggested that Sajith Premadasa was willing to lead a government formed with the ‘progressive’ elements of the NPP.
To sort out this mess, the government had to resort to cringeworthy measures. A photo of President Anura Kumara Dissanayake holding a plant and other NPP leaders surrounding it was released. Bimal Ratnayake publicly said that they were all in “full love” and “full fit” with Amarasuriya.
Amarasuriya survives as PM because her party believes it was an honest mistake by her, but she can now ill afford similar gaffes in the future. All this goes to show that politics, being the bloodsport that it is, only certain types of animals can survive in it.
Harsha De Silva could be that certain type of animal. He may have thought he was displaying a stroke of political genius when, during a speech in Parliament, he said “don’t laugh at India” referring to the high tariffs United States President Donald Trump had imposed on that country, even though no one in government was targeting, criticizing or mocking our giant neighbour.
The next phase of De Silva’s plan was to post a clip of that particular segment of his speech, add subtitles and post it on his social media accounts. It had the response De Silva desired, at least in India, where it was quoted in the media and re-circulated many times. De Silva had his fifteen minutes of fame in Bharat.
What De Silva didn’t bargain for was the backlash he encountered in Sri Lanka. The average Lankan citizen, intelligent and political savvy these days, saw this for what it was: a crude attempt by De Silva to score brownie points with India and project himself as a leading light- and possibly a leadership contender- in the SJB. There is nothing wrong in aspiring for leadership of the SJB but to do so at the expense of your own country’s government was not correct when the government had done nothing to antagonise India and, to contrary, had gone out of its way to appease New Delhi.
The fallout for De Silva was significant. No one from the SJB spoke out in his defence. Previously, De Silva portrayed himself as the economic czar of the SJB and had taken on the mantle of self-appointed shadow Minister of Finance because of his professional training as an economist though some of his more recent economic predictions have been way off the mark, suggesting that Sri Lanka will be hit by high tariffs by Trump and that importing cars will be a great financial burden on the Treasury.
Silva was also seen as a politician in the gentleman’s mould who does not stoop to conquer. That has now changed with this latest tactic, and even his colleagues in the SJB are now wary about him. SJB members report that Silva has been surreptitiously promoting himself among various factions within the party but not openly challenging Sajith Premadasa because he fears that it will be the end of his political career.
De Silva will be 61 years of age in a few days’ time and will be over 65 years of age when the next national elections are held. It may be that he feels he is running out of time. It may be that he missed out on a golden opportunity to be Finance Minister when Ranil Wickremesinghe became President. Being in the opposition for a long time plays tricks on peopl,e and this maybe what prompted the below-the-belt assault on the government. Now, he has learnt the hard way that there are no shortcuts to power.
Amarasuriya’s lapse exposed her amateurishness. Silva’s act was more diabolical. PM Amarasuriya and MP De Silva, we hope, have learnt their lessons. Or else, the country will stand to lose two politicians of whom much was expected.
-This article was originally featured on counterpoint.lk
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