Hon. Arjuna Sujeewa Senasinghe - Attorney-at-Law
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Recent Speeches
The speech is extremely brief and consists solely of the speaker rising to a point of order, with no substantive argument, proposal, or demand articulated within the provided text. There is insufficient content to summarize beyond noting that **Hon. Arjuna Sujeewa Senasinghe raised a point of order** in the chamber on 20 February 2026. No further details of the point of order are contained in the excerpt provided.
Read full text →## Summary Hon. Arjuna Sujeewa Senasinghe challenged the government's economic and anti-corruption narratives, arguing that claims of VAT abolition, growth, and accountability are misleading. He cited a Dinamina report indicating that food insecurity has doubled from 16% to 32% of families, presented Corruption Perceptions Index data showing Sri Lanka's ranking has deteriorated to 107th, and contended that reported GDP growth figures were artificially inflated by vehicle import revenues rather than genuine investment. He also listed specific government vehicle registration numbers assigned to senior officials across multiple ministries and provincial bodies to counter government criticism of opposition vehicle use, and questioned the administration's unfulfilled pledges to recover stolen assets and prosecute the Rajapaksas. The speaker concluded by dismissing the abolition of MPs' pensions as a minor and overstated measure, accusing the government of hypocrisy in enjoying official perquisites while the public faces economic hardship.
Read full text →The Hon. Arjuna Sujeewa Senasinghe challenged the Deputy Minister's claims regarding taxation, asserting that taxes have not been reduced. He argued that the current government is continuing the economic program established under former President Ranil Wickremesinghe, rather than implementing an independent policy agenda. To support this claim, he cited the Central Bank Governor's statement that any incoming president, regardless of political affiliation, would have been compelled to follow the same economic framework.
Read full text →The speech is too brief to provide a substantive summary. The member, Hon. Arjuna Sujeewa Senasinghe, made only a single brief remark — **"The left hand does not work"** — without further elaboration or context, making it insufficient to identify a clear argument, proposal, or policy reference.
Read full text →This speech contains no substantive parliamentary content to summarize. The speaker made only a brief, informal personal remark directed at the Deputy Speaker, with no policy arguments, proposals, questions, or references to legislation or events.
Read full text →The Hon. Arjuna Sujeewa Senasinghe rose on a point of order, citing Standing Order 92(2)(a) regarding the right of a member to question whether proper procedures are being followed in parliamentary proceedings. He also briefly acknowledged the Leader of the House for promptly moving to government business.
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