Jump to content

1970 Ceylonese parliamentary election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1970 Ceylonese parliamentary election

← 1965 27 May 1970 1977 →

151 seats in the House of Representatives of Ceylon
76 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
LSSP
Leader Sirimavo Bandaranaike N. M. Perera Dudley Senanayake
Party SLFP LSSP UNP
Alliance United Front United Front
Leader since 1960 1945 1957
Leader's seat Attanagalla Yatiyantota Dedigama
Last election 30.18%, 41 seats 7.47%, 10 seats 39.31%, 66 seats
Seats won 91 19 17
Seat change Increase 50 Increase 9 Decrease 49
Popular vote 1,839,979 433,224 1,892,525
Percentage 36.86% 8.68% 37.91%
Swing Increase 6.68pp Increase 1.21pp Decrease 1.40pp

Prime Minister before election

Dudley Senanayake
UNP

Prime Minister-designate

Sirimavo Bandaranaike
SLFP

Parliamentary elections were held in Ceylon in 1970.

Background

[edit]

SLFP leader Sirimavo Bandaranaike had come to the conclusion that her party's best hope of power was forming a permanent alliance with Ceylon's Marxist parties. She assembled the SLFP, the Trotskyist LSSP, and the Communists into the United Front coalition. The UF's platform was called the Common Programme; it featured extensive nationalization, a non-aligned foreign policy, expanded social programmes, and replacement of the British-imposed, monarchical Soulbury constitution with a republican constitution.

The UNP government of Dudley Senanayake had not made much headway with Ceylon's twin problems of inflation and unemployment, nor had it attempted solving the linked problems of feudal property relations and adverse terms of trade by agrarian reform and industrialisation. The UNP had become widely perceived as a party of the rich, out of touch with the concerns of ordinary people. The UF's socialist platform had much greater appeal.

Results

[edit]

The UF (with 49% of the vote) won an overwhelming majority, despite the UNP's plurality of the popular vote, due to the member parties running in different constituencies. The Tamil majority constituencies voted mainly for the two Tamil parties, one of which (the All Ceylon Tamil Congress), later joined the UF.[citation needed]

The 1970 election was the last held under the Soulbury constitution. The UF Government established the free, sovereign and independent Republic of Sri Lanka in 1972, breaking the last ties of colonialism.

The British-owned plantations were nationalised and there was land reform – giving poor rural people land. Industrial democracy was instituted in the transport and manufacturing sectors. A National pharmaceuticals policy was established, allowing for affordable drugs. A new education policy was followed, aimed at making education more relevant.

Increased protection led to growth in the manufacturing sector, particularly in textiles and garments, electronics and industrial machinery.

PartyVotes%Seats
United National Party1,892,52537.9117
Sri Lanka Freedom Party1,839,97936.8691
Lanka Sama Samaja Party433,2248.6819
Illankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi245,7274.9213
Communist Party of Ceylon169,1993.396
All Ceylon Tamil Congress115,5672.323
Mahajana Eksath Peramuna46,5710.930
Independents249,0064.992
Total4,991,798100.00151
Registered voters/turnout5,505,028
Source: Kusaka Research Institute

References

[edit]
  • "Result of Parliamentary General Election 1970" (PDF). Department of Elections, Sri Lanka. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 December 2009.
  • "1970 General Election Results". LankaNewspapers.com. Archived from the original on 10 March 2012.
  • "Table 37 Parliament Election (1970)". Sri Lanka Statistics. 10 February 2009. Archived from the original on 9 October 2011. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  • "Sri Lanka Parliamentary Chamber: Parliament Elections Held in 1970" (PDF). Inter-Parliamentary Union.
  • Rajasingham, K. T. (5 January 2002). "Chapter 21: A further lack of perspicuity". Sri Lanka: The Untold Story. Asia Times. Archived from the original on 27 January 2002.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)