27 June, 2026

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From Deadlock To Consensus In The National Interest

By Jehan Perera

Jehan Perera

The appointment of Senior Deputy Auditor General Samudika Jayarathna as Auditor General brings to a close a prolonged period of uncertainty surrounding one of Sri Lanka’s most important constitutional offices. The unanimous decision of the Constitutional Council, reached after nearly ten months of vacancy following the retirement of the previous incumbent in April 2025, restores continuity to the National Audit Office and provides an opportunity to reflect on how Sri Lanka’s system of constitutional governance operates in practice.

The manner in which this appointment was ultimately agreed upon is as significant as the appointment itself. After months of disagreement and public debate, the members of the Constitutional Council arrived at a consensual outcome that balanced the President’s democratic mandate with the Constitutional Council’s responsibility to exercise independent judgment. In doing so, they demonstrated the importance of collegiality, restraint and consensus in constitutional decision making.

The Constitutional Council stands out as one of Sri Lanka’s most important governance mechanisms, particularly at a time when even long established democracies are struggling with the dangers of executive overreach. Sri Lanka’s attempt to balance democratic mandate with independent oversight places it within a small but important group of constitutional arrangements that seek to protect the integrity of key state institutions without paralysing elected governments. Democratic power must be exercised, but it must also be restrained by institutions that command broad public confidence. Performance across such systems has been uneven, but the underlying principle remains widely shared. Comparable mechanisms exist in a number of democracies.

In the United Kingdom, independent appointments commissions for the judiciary and civil service operate alongside ministerial authority, constraining but not eliminating political discretion. In Canada, parliamentary committees scrutinise appointments to oversight institutions such as the Auditor General, whose independence is regarded as essential to democratic accountability. In India, the collegium system for judicial appointments, in which senior judges of the Supreme Court play the decisive role in recommending appointments, emerged from a similar concern to insulate the judiciary from excessive political influence.

JVP Role

The Constitutional Council in Sri Lanka was developed to ensure that the highest level appointments to the most important institutions of the state would be the best possible under the circumstances. The objective was not to deny the executive its authority, but to ensure that those appointed would be independent, suitably qualified and not politically partisan. The Council is entrusted with oversight of appointments in seven critical areas of governance. These include the judiciary through appointments to the Supreme Court and Court of Appeal, the independent commissions overseeing elections, the public service, the police, human rights, bribery and corruption, and the office of the Auditor General.

The most outstanding feature of the Constitutional Council is its composition. Its ten members are drawn from the government, the main opposition, smaller political parties and civil society. This plural composition was designed to reflect the diversity of political opinion in Parliament while also bringing in voices that are not directly tied to electoral competition. It reflects a belief that legitimacy in sensitive appointments comes not only from legal authority but also from inclusion and balance. The unanimous decision on the appointment of the Auditor General underscores the collective responsibility borne by all members of the Constitutional Council.

The idea of the Constitutional Council was strongly promoted around the year 2000, during a period of intense debate about the concentration of power in the executive presidency. Civil society organisations, professional bodies and sections of the legal community argued that unchecked executive authority had contributed to abuse of power and declining public trust. The JVP, which today forms the core of the NPP government, was among the political actors advocating this position and joined the government of President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga on a platform that included constitutional reform. The first version of the Constitutional Council came into being in 2001 with the 17th Amendment to the Constitution. It functioned with varying degrees of effectiveness.

On several occasions President Kumaratunga under whom the system came into operation disagreed on occasion with the views of the Constitutional Council, leading to deadlock and delays in appointments. Since its inception, the Constitutional Council has been weakened or strengthened by successive constitutional amendments depending on how willing governing leaders were to tolerate constraints on their own power. The 18th Amendment significantly reduced its authority by restoring much of the appointment power to the executive. The 19th Amendment reversed that trend and strengthened the Constitutional Council. The 20th Amendment curtailed its role once again, while the 21st Amendment restored a measure of balance. At present, the Constitutional Council operates under the framework of the 21st Amendment, reflecting a renewed commitment to shared decision making in key appointments.

President’s Preference

The office of Auditor General is a constitutionally protected one, reflecting the central role played by the National Audit Office in monitoring public spending and safeguarding public resources. Without a credible and fearless audit institution, parliamentary oversight risks becoming superficial and corruption can flourish unchecked. The role of the Auditor General’s Department has assumed even greater importance in the present context, when rooting out corruption is a stated priority of the government and a central element of the mandate it received from the electorate at the presidential and parliamentary elections held in 2024.

Over ten months, the Constitutional Council wrestled with issue declining to approve four nominees proposed by the President including that of Senior Deputy Auditor General Jayarathna. These decisions generated significant public debate and concern about the prolonged vacancy in such a critical institution, particularly following the controversial nomination of a serving military officer. At the same time, they reflected the Constitutional Council’s determination to exercise independent judgment rather than simply endorse executive preference.

The President’s decision to resubmit the name of Ms Jayarathna indicated a clear preference while also inviting reconsideration in the light of changed circumstances. Her eventual approval suggests that the Constitutional Council was satisfied that the required standards of competence, integrity and independence had been met. The change in the composition of the Constitutional Council, including new civil society representatives, also allowed for a fresh and collective assessment. The position demands professional expertise, moral courage and institutional independence, particularly in a climate where investigations into past misuse of public resources are politically sensitive. By reaching a unanimous decision, the members of the Constitutional Council collectively assumed responsibility for ensuring that the office commands authority and public trust.

A consensual and collegial approach to appointments strengthens institutions and enhances public confidence. The President and the government hold the people’s democratic mandate, a mandate that carries both authority and responsibility. The Constitutional Council’s legitimacy lies not in electoral endorsement, but in balanced and principled decision making. Sri Lanka’s experience shows that institutions function best when guided by restraint, mutual respect and a shared commitment to the public good. In the case of the Auditor General, consensus has enabled democratic authority and constitutional oversight to be reconciled. That balance is difficult to achieve, but it remains essential if constitutional governance is to endure and command public confidence.

Latest comments

  • 23
    8

    1/2,

    Jehan Buddy,

    You go around in the Singlish speaking Colombo cheese and wine circuit ……. hobnobbing with Ranil and the diplomatic/NGO shindig …….

    You write about everything under the sun …… except Ranil’s culpability for the appointments …… now AKD has to deal with!

    Can you even say Hmmm about good ol’ Deshabandu’s appointment? Why Ranil went to such trouble to appoint him? For Christ’s sakes man look at Deshabandu’s record and why Ranil thought he was the most suitable!

    Hmmmm?

    You dishonest pricks go around the Colombo circuit …….. mouthing your monumentally dishonest crap for filthy lucre ………

    When I come across guys like you, I just want to puke …….. if I could only find ……… Native’s wife’s million dollar rug …………..

  • 21
    5

    2/2,

    I have to do this …… rub people’s noses in the truth and honesty …… because you honest-job-less disgusting pricks won’t do it!

    And I’m doing it for free. …….. cause I can pay myself …….

    No one will thank me ….. it’s a thankless job ……. but someone’s gotta do it ……

    Ah! If there was even just one sun-bronzed blue-eyed Lankan blonde ……. with a honest mind and a true heart! …….. who can earn a honest living ……. even honest straight-forward whoring …..

    Read the comments ….. what they are saying about her honesty: no one will say that about you guys who are in the same line of work ……. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j7hGd5KYzeg

    • 12
      0

      Nimal,
      I don’t think even the bravest Sri Lankan journalist (a female one at that) would do a story like that. Imagine the holier-than-thou yellow pandemonium in the streets, the Cardinal having fits…….even Wimal dying of an overdose of Lemon Puff.
      And of course, it would be all in a good cause, to prove that our ladies are all married, properly covered at all times, and wouldn’t even work as bus conductors. LLike CChampa, actually.

      • 8
        0

        old codger

        ” …………to prove that our ladies are all married, properly covered at all times, and wouldn’t even work as bus conductors. “

        Yet these same women are sent to Middle Eastern countries to work as domestic maids, wrapped in “trench abayas”, while their husbands remain in Sri Lanka enjoying themselves.

        And while we’re talking about Wimale let’s not forget that Gota trusted him enough to appoint him as Minister of Industries – this only happens in Sri Lanka.

        • 10
          2

          Happiness is a warm microphone in the hand …….. ol’ Ranil in his element! …… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cXKkgP-ugY

          LM would be whooping for joy ……. dancing the Baila ……

          How about you, Native?


          Where else in the world …… can one find better entertainment?

          Ol’ Donald is predictable and boring: the same bloody act day in day out …….


          Gotta hand it to him ……. ol’ Ranil has the “Vision” thingy ……….. in spades!

    • 12
      4

      In UK it’s Independent Appointment Commission,
      in Canada, Parliamentary Committee ,
      in India, Collegium system ,
      in US Congressional hearing,
      in ShamLanka, it’s Mahanayakas / Theros who appoint
      Indeed country like no other.

    • 5
      7

      nimal fernando

      Where you’ve been, marching with monks, join the anti ICE protestors, …. organising committee for how to revive Trump’s political fortunes, …. ?
      Why did Trump settle for 18% tax on Indian made goods? Isn’t it stupid idea? All his old mates have already deserted him including all USA’a weather friend Britain,

      Here a minority doesn’t want peace.
      Watch/read these following news items:

      https://lankaleader.com/lankaleader/page/10?post_id=16495

      https://lankaleader.com/lankaleader/page/10?post_id=16510.
      Sarath is missing all those tanks, field guns, armed cars, armoured personal carriers, Buffel, multi purpose trucks, multiple rocket launchers, mortars, RPG, …… ect

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxA38yuWdPQ

      Now tell me what all these protestors actually want from people?

      • 13
        1

        Native,

        Any comment on this? You guys are the best clowns in the whole wide world!!! :))))))))


        “Can you even say Hmmm about good ol’ Deshabandu’s appointment? Why Ranil went to such trouble to appoint him? For Christ’s sakes man look at Deshabandu’s record and why Ranil thought he was the most suitable!

        Hmmmm?”

        • 2
          0

          nimal fernando

          “Any comment on this? You guys are the best clowns in the whole wide world!!!”

          Children like clowns.
          I was never a class clown. However, if I can make you happy, I think that makes life worth living.
          Thanks for the opportunity.

          Rest assured, no sad clown paradox here.

      • 10
        1

        1/2,

        Native,

        Please please please please try to understand this before one of us die of old age!

        There are simple easy self-evident truths that are not evident to many …….. because their minds are filled with piles of crap …….. they carry from early childhood.

        You only need one good decent civilized man with honesty, true-aim and true-intentions to reform a country!

        As AKD has proved!!


        You don’t need 2500 years of pseudo-Buddhism, pseudo-Christianity, or whatever you care to name …………

        99.99% of politicians don’t take-up politics to serve others. 99.99% of priests don’t enter priesthood to serve the religions/devotees. 95.0% of journalists don’t take up journalism to be impartial honest journalists. Well paid “thinkers” don’t get taken into Think-Tanks to have honest impartial thoughts.

        It’s a free-meal for all of them. ……. to survive (in most cases lavishly) without honest toil ……. without doing a honest day’s work.

        • 2
          0

          nimal fernando

          “There are simple easy self-evident truths that are not evident to many …….. because their minds are filled with piles of crap …….. they carry from early childhood.”

          I agree with you.
          Isn’t it why they vote for people like Trump, Modi/Amit, Duterte, Banda, Weeping Widow (SJ’s dream girl) Rajapaksas, Srisena, Wimale, ………….. Siritharan, Mavai, ….. ? You should be happy that Malwattu, Asgiria, …. don’t contest popular elections however they wield lot of power over every government and state.

          “As AKD has proved!!”

          If he truly wants to prove himself, he must nationalise land belonging to viharas, temples, churches, mosques, and all other religious institutions. He must also ban political statements by so-called religious leaders and require them to leave their respective bungalows and walk the length and breadth of the country at least once a year.

          Only then can one say that AKD has proved himself. These lands should be distributed to poor people, but only to those who are willing to work hard, become self-sustaining, and live without the customary handouts.

          AKD and his fellow NPP supporters should give up the mistaken belief that through social engineering equal opportunity could be created for all people, which requires changing demography, identity, livelihoods, and related aspects of society. This could lead to Nazi idea of social engineering, which could bring all social, political, and cultural organizations into line with Sinhala/Buddhist fascist ideology.

      • 10
        1

        2/2,

        We have had Jehans writing, Ranils, Mahindas, Bandarnayakes, …… politicking. We have had Buddhist/Christian priests preaching ……….. for yonks.

        None of them reformed the country ……..

        Until a honest man with true class like AKD appeared on the scene. …….. (true-class you may not recognise even if it fell on your goddamn head ….. for Colombo fashionistas like you, class is Ranil!)

        A civilized country will never be born from uncivilized men/women.

        AKD is a truly civilized man. …….. And a true genuine Buddhist to boot!

        If people can’t recognize it, they are mental (Lankans say Mantal.)

        I don’t have to name who are mental in the forum …… to people who have reached normal mental-adulthood ……….


        For Christ’s sakes man, Native ….. you are the last person who should be “Mantal!”

    • 3
      0

      nimal fernando

      Do you know what Namal Baby want from this country?
      Watch Lawyer Lakmali Hemachandra MP thundering in parliament.
      https://www.facebook.com/reel/1651034239640520

      Don’t take chances, make sure you avoid confrontation with this MP.

  • 2
    17

    Thank you, Jehan, for your analysis of the history of the Constitutional Council and its responsibilities.
    I am concerned about the person’s ability, given that his 8 previous nominations for the AG’s post were summarily rejected.
    Are failures the pillars of success, or are failures successive pillars?
    As I write this, I am watching the Independence Day hullabaloo on YouTube. Are these vulgar dancers and the rest being paid for participation?
    Citizens, we are yet to recover even 5% from Ditwah. This utter squandering of public money is disgusting. This money could have been better spent in rebuilding the schools recently damaged by Ditwah in outlying areas
    I will not let the Independence Day celebs ruin my day. Soon, a frog will stand up and croak to be cheered by his newly tied & coat-attired dumbheads.
    I switched off YouTube.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyJ6yGx8MOE

    • 10
      4

      Roxie de Abrew

      Thanks for the link.
      Some of the dignitaries who were seated in the front row looks familiar, among them I noticed a chief abductor of school students. He should be put in prison along with his fellow kidnapers. Instead he was being honoured.

      As usual another new government, …. running out of steam, … running out of moral responsibility,

  • 6
    21

    Dear Readers,
    The disgraceful delay by the NPP-led government in appointing the Auditor General tears apart every moral sermon it preached while in opposition. This is the same movement that weaponized street protests, slogans, and manufactured outrage over far lesser issues, claiming to be the sole guardian of accountability. Yet once in power, the NPP has revealed itself not as a force of reform but as an administration crippled by indecision, inexperience, and fear of its own promises. What they sold to the public as principled governance now stands exposed as shallow populism, built on exaggeration rather than understanding of how a state actually functions. While they crawled toward an overdue appointment, the country watched an unprecedented collapse of institutional stability, with presidents and secretaries abandoning key public offices at a rate unseen in recent history. This is not resistance from a corrupt system — it is the predictable implosion of a leadership that mistook shouting from the sidelines for the capacity to govern. The NPP did not walk into reality; reality ran them over, and the nation is now paying the price for that political illusion.

  • 5
    21

    Sri Lanka is now witnessing the clearest possible contrast between what the NPP promised and what it has delivered. They campaigned on efficiency, integrity, and decisive governance, yet in power they have produced delay, confusion, and institutional drift — most glaringly in the prolonged failure to appoint even a constitutionally critical office like the Auditor General.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8MgZq1RdQ2I

    They vowed to restore accountability, but presided over an unprecedented exit of presidents and secretaries from key state institutions, hollowing out governance instead of strengthening it. They promised realism and honesty, yet built their entire political ascent on exaggerations and sweeping denunciations of a country that, despite its flaws, remains a lower-middle-income nation with comparatively strong social indicators in health and education when measured against much of the region.

    They mocked debt-funded state functions and even questioned the legitimacy of celebrating national defense on Independence Day, conveniently ignoring that borrowing for security and development is standard practice across rich and poor nations alike. What was sold as a disciplined alternative to “failed politics” has materialized as moral posturing without administrative competence, arrogance without understanding, and slogans without outcomes. The NPP did not fail because the system resisted reform; it failed because governing a complex society demands substance, restraint, and knowledge — qualities it loudly claimed to possess, but has consistently failed to demonstrate.

  • 21
    5

    The appointment to the post of Auditor General was a ‘Delaying Tactic’ adopted by the Opposition to sling mud at the Government. How many times (five) the names that were submitted were rejected by the CC (using the civil society membership), and it was also blamed on the ‘Common Opposition’ member voting with the Government nominations? Remember, the name of the presently appointed person was also rejected two times. With the full knowledge of this scenario, some idiots comment on this page, placing the blame on the Government.

    What did the ‘Opposition’ want? They nominated Dharmadasa Gammanpila and started a campaign to force the government to appoint him. It didn’t stop at that. This name was ‘Recommended’ by the ‘Thri Nikayaka Bikkus’ (Malwatta/Asgiriya/Amarapura) ‘High Priests’ and called upon the President to appoint Dharmapala Gammanpila. What a ‘Clownish’ ‘Idiocyncracy’ that was?
    t.b.c.
    If this Dharmadasa Gammanpila had an iota of shame or credibility, he should have opted out of the race or disassociated with the ‘Opposition’ and the ‘Sangha Naykas’ recommendations. Even if appointed, after these vulgar behaviours of the ‘Opposition’ and the ‘Chief Buddhist? Priests, he would never have been able to establish the much-needed ‘Independence’ in the performance of his duties.

    • 14
      3

      Douglas, apparently Dharmadasa Gammanpila has been cooking ,
      sorry
      auditing books for more than 30 years.
      Obviously the bugger couldn’t come up with one political scam. Not even Rambuk’s mega heist.
      Sangha Nayakas, wanted the most senior corrupted guy to be appointed as next Auditor General.
      Until now , what we had is criminal ,corrupt politicians, civil servants, Low Priests,
      judiciary / low and odor and Mafia , all working together as a team.

      • 4
        5

        Mate Chiv,
        If this person has been ‘cooking’ the books, why is he still in the service?
        Why are the ferocious bulldogs in the AG’s Dept, CID and CIABOC silent?

        • 0
          0

          Roxie, that is a very valid question ???
          Don’t you think most senior civil servants on payroll are corrupt ???
          First the AG , CID and the …. rest had to be cleaned up.
          Even a minority CC member was recently asked to resign.
          Remember the number of police and judiciary higher-ups, judges, magistrates, either suspended or sent home on early retirement.

      • 6
        11

        Hello Chiv,
        I have always been anti-Rajapakshe, but the magnitude of Anura Kumara’s exaggerations as an opponent has backfired on them today, as they function similarly to the saying “setting fire like Hanuma”. Meaning that everyone else is caught up in their normal personal attacks since their goal is to politically isolate the rivals. As of today, we observe a plethora of filed cases that finish without the accused being convicted in Sri Lankan court investigations. So, please consider any public loud claims before accepting them as true. This country and its actions are similar to “Wanathamulla stinky garbage dumps”.
        .
        There is no verified evidence that Dharmapala Gammanpila faced corruption charges or was formally involved in criminal proceedings related to his audit work.

        He was generally regarded publicly as an experienced insider candidate with a professional background in auditing, though perceptions varied politically.

        Some ethical questions were raised regarding the allegation about accepted travel tickets, but this was discussed in the context of the appointment debate — not as a criminal conviction.

        • 7
          3

          LM, it’s not about personal gains, corruption or direct involvement.
          Here is a person under oath, failed to perform his duties, thereby causing massive losses to the nation.
          There is no excuse, because we often here about whistle blowers at all levels exposing such wrong doings. May be not in Lanka because they too are part of the system.
          Apparently this bugger has been there for more than 30 years , whereas IMF in no time told us that less than 30% of the actual allocated funds were utilized.
          Not a single person questioned their findings ?
          That goes to show , for decades , people like him normalized (helped) corruption.

  • 18
    4

    II – Now the question to be raised is: What made the CC ‘Unanimously’ approve Ms. Jayarathne (the Deputy Auditor General) to be the Auditor General, whose name was ‘Rejected’ twice?

    Leave aside the ‘Three’ newly appointed members to the CC. What made the rest (Opposition Leader & the rest of the Minority party members) vote for the same candidate they rejected earlier?

    Shouldn’t this matter have been resolved much earlier, if the same ‘Wisdom’ and ‘Prudence’ (proved much delayed) had been exercised a few months back?

    Thank you, President AKD, for not bowing down to the ‘Pressure Tactics’ of the Opposition and the ‘High Priests’ of the ‘Nikayas'(Sects) of the Buddhagama.

    • 16
      4

      D, If the former CC members rejected Ms Jayaratne on the grounds of “corruption allegations,” it’s important to note how come those allegations dropped this time? In fact, there had never been any formal case or inquiry underway against her. I would not believe AKD to nominate someone with corruption proceedings either, which raises the question – whether those earlier objections were based purely on personal or political bias rather than substantiated concerns.

      Considering the fact that the current CC approved her appointment suggests that the resistance was only from those who have since left? Because it’s noteworthy that Sajith has supported her nomination this time, and a new member – ex civil servant Austin Fernando, a long‑time loyalist of previous UNP administrations particularly under Ranil, has also endorsed her without any objection. That only proves Ms J has been subjected to ill-will of some members of the previous CC and – as usual – the opposition proved they are masters of shooting misguided missiles!

  • 15
    5

    Jit: “…..opposition proved…… misguided missiles.”

    What actually happened was that the Opposition sent a ‘Missile.’ ……. proposing the name of Dharmapala Gammanpila to the President. But, being a sharp-eyed politician, the President snubbed it. Next, they tried it through the ‘Maha Nayaks’. That too failed. The objective of the Opposition was to have one of their ‘Lackies’ appointed to that position, as they did with the appointment of the Attorney General.

    Hasn’t AKD ( known to one idiot on this forum as Thambuthegama Burampi) shown his skills of managing a ‘Crisis’? Well done, AKD!

    • 10
      3

      Gammanpila a missile? I would rather label him as an already spent bullet! That was the card the opposition pulled out this time to win the game assuming it was an Ace but sorely it turned out to be a joker card even tarnishing mahanayaka reputation.

  • 8
    4

    Dear Commentator and Readers: Please listen to the following link. This was the speech given by the ex-Auditor General, Gamini Wickramarathne, on the occasion of the induction of the newly appointed Auditor General.

    https://youtu.be/mfgs1s8JjHE?si=KcJLmgUCwQsEimP8

    Please note the number of times he mentioned a ‘Surreptitious, Underground Organization’ in the Department that ‘Masterminded’ the delay in the appointment of a new Auditor General. He described how this ‘Underground and Surreptitious Organization’ leaked even the facts from the ‘Personal Files’ of officers and misled the Opposition and the Mahanayakas.

    Thank you, President, for being well aware of this ‘Modus Operandi’ and handling the issues very efficiently.

  • 8
    8

    “Hasn’t AKD ( known to one idiot on this forum as Thambuthegama Burampi) shown his skills of managing a ‘Crisis’? Well done, AKD!”

    What more could a blood sucker throw at a traumatized Sri Lankan who lost twelve of his contemporaries, including childhood friends, to rhythless JVP rebels during the horrific 89–92 period in Habaraduwa, which was allegedly the hotspot of the mothers who were allegedly exploited by Jeppos for taking their sons? I’ll curse you! I could demonstrate each of these points here.

    I can’t stand the tears of those moms in Anglugaha, Galle, Gampaha, and other places; Douglas’ cold-bloodedness knows no bounds. -Hilarious !

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