9 - Election Systems
from PART II - Practice in Sri Lanka
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2011
Summary
The First-Past-the-Post System
Sri Lanka has been singularly unlucky in the election systems it has adopted over the years. Initially we had the First-past-the-post system used in Britain, whereby the country was divided into constituencies which elected members by a simple majority. Only a few constituencies had more than one member. This system was designed to ensure representation of different communities where they were mixed up together so that two separate constituencies would not have served the purpose. Thus, Akurana usually elected one Sinhala and one Muslim member, while Nuwara Eliya, which became a multi-member constituency for the 1977 election, had one representative each of the United National Party (UNP), the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and the Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC).
In general, however, (as opposed to the few multimember constituencies) the philosophy was that those who won, by however small a margin, took it all. In Britain, the effect of this is mitigated because there are certain constituencies which always stay with one party, so that a party that loses the election still has substantial strength in parliament. In Sri Lanka, however, where most constituencies are what are termed marginals, that is, a small shift either way changes the result, the two major parties found themselves reduced to very small numbers when they lost an election. Thus, the UNP got eight seats out of 101 in 1956 and seventeen out of 157 in 1970, while the SLFP had eight out of 168 in 1977. Conversely, the party that won had a massive majority, even though its share of the national vote was just around fifty per cent.
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- Political Principles and their Practice in Sri Lanka , pp. 91 - 102Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2005