Hon. (Mrs.) M.A.C.S. Chathuri Gangani, M.P.
Profession: Teacher
Speeches 23 #163 of 225·#101 in party
Attendance 4/8 days present (of recorded)
Top topic Public Finance 8 speeches
Last spoke 7 May 2026 in Debate
Activity by sitting
17 sittings · counts only, no scoring.
Topic focus
AI summary AI-assigned tags, 1–3 per speech. Counts only — not a score.
Speech history
23 speeches- 4 March 2025 AI summary Hon. M.A.C.S. Chathuri Gangani raised Question No. 489/2025 regarding licences issued for gemstone mining in the Wellawaya Divisional Secretariat Division. The question sought official information on the issuance of such licences, likely including their number, locations, and regulatory oversight within the relevant area. Oral Question 3: Gemstone mining licences in Wellawaya (Q.489/2025) Environment Read →
- 25 February 2025 AI summary Hon. (Mrs.) M.A.C.S. Chathuri Gangani supported the Budget as a people-centred response to the economic crisis, highlighting expanded welfare allocations including Aswesuma, support for persons with disabilities and kidney patients, and measures for women’s and children’s protection. She cited specific proposals for maternal nutrition, Thriposha funding, facilities for children with autism and neurodevelopmental disorders, increased health and education allocations, higher preschool meal and teacher allowances, increased scholarships and university stipends, and larger allowances for sports school students. Referring to Moneragala, she emphasized support for rural women, poor families, and talented children facing economic hardship. Second Reading Debate: Appropriation Bill 2025 (Continuation Day 7) EducationPublic FinanceHealthcare Read →
- 9 January 2025 AI summary Hon. (Mrs.) M.A.C.S. Chathuri Gangani attributed current rice and commodity issues to long-term economic mismanagement by previous governments, citing high food inflation, malnutrition, school dropouts, and the hardship faced by children, pregnant mothers, and families during the recent crisis. She said the government had taken measures within its first 100 days, including tax reductions on local dairy products, lower import duty on big onions, short-term imports of essential goods, and a Rs. 6,000 education grant for children in schools with fewer than 300 students. She also referred to past attacks on journalists in responding to Opposition comments on media freedom, and stated that the government’s priority under the Clean Sri Lanka programme is poverty reduction and rebuilding living standards. Adjournment Debate: Government Performance and Commodity Prices Cost of LivingEducationHealthcare Read →