Dissanayake wins Sri Lanka’s presidential election as voters reject old guard
Marxist Anura Kumara Dissanayake has campaigned on a pro-working class and anti-elite platform, which has proven popular with young people.
Marxist legislator Anura Kumara Dissanayake has won Sri Lanka’s presidential election, according to data released by the Election Commission, as voters rejected the old political guard that has been widely accused of pushing the South Asian nation towards economic ruin.
Mr Dissanayake, whose pro-working class and anti-political elite campaigning made him popular among young people, secured victory over opposition leader Sajith Premadasa and incumbent liberal president Ranil Wickremesinghe, who took over the country two years ago after its economy hit rock bottom.
Mr Dissanayake received 5,740,179 votes, followed by Mr Premadasa with 4,530,902, Election Commission data showed.
The election held on Saturday was crucial as the country seeks to recover from the worst economic crisis in its history and the resulting political upheaval.
“This achievement is not the result of any single person’s work, but the collective effort of hundreds of thousands of you. Your commitment has brought us this far, and for that, I am deeply grateful. This victory belongs to all of us,” Mr Dissanayake said in a post on X.
Mr Dissanayake, 55, leads the left-leaning coalition National People’s Power, an umbrella of civil society groups, professionals, Buddhist clergy and students.
The election was a virtual referendum on Mr Wickremesinghe’s leadership of a fragile recovery, including restructuring Sri Lanka’s debt under an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout programme after it defaulted in 2022.
Mr Dissanayake had said he would renegotiate the IMF deal to make austerity measures more bearable.
Mr Wickremesinghe had warned that any move to alter the basics of the agreement could delay the release of a fourth tranche of nearly three billion dollars that is crucial to maintaining stability.
Neither candidate received more than 50% of the vote.
Under the Sri Lankan election system that allows voters to select three candidates in the order of their preference, the top two are retained and the ballots of the eliminated candidates are checked for preferences given to either of the top two vote-getters.
The one with the highest number of votes is declared the winner.
It was a strong showing for Mr Dissanayake, who won just over 3% of votes in a previous presidential election in 2019, and suggests voters are fatigued with the old political guard.
Mr Wickremesinghe’s foreign minister Ali Sabry congratulated Mr Dissanayake and said he hopes he will “lead with a commitment to transparency, integrity, and the long-term good of the country”.
The government announced on Thursday that it passed the final hurdle in debt restructuring by reaching an agreement in principle with private bond holders.
At the time of its default, Sri Lanka’s local and foreign debt totalled 83 billion dollars.
The government says it has now restructured more than 17 billion dollars.
Despite a significant improvement in key economic figures, Sri Lankans are struggling with high taxes and living costs.
Sri Lanka’s economic crisis resulted largely from excessive borrowing on projects that did not generate revenue.
The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and the government’s insistence on using scarce foreign reserves to prop up the currency, the rupee, contributed to the economy’s freefall.
The economic collapse brought a severe shortage of essentials such as medicine, food, cooking gas and fuel, with people spending days waiting in line to obtain them.
It led to rioting in which protesters took over key buildings including the president’s house, his office and the prime minister’s office, forcing then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee the country and resign.
Mr Wickremesinghe was elected by a parliamentary vote in July 2022 to cover the remainder of Mr Rajapaksa’s five-year term.