I think it depends on what issues you're talking about.
There appears to me, and analysts who I respect, a growing discomfort among many Sinhalese with the direction that the current government is travelling with respect to the rule of law, police abuses, corruption, mismanagement of the economy, high cost of living, a whole series of issues. There is growing discomfort with the government, which previously had the wide backing of the Sinhalese majority.
I think there has been a long unhappiness with this government among the Tamil community and also significant unhappiness among Muslims, particularly after the wave of attacks on mosques and Muslim-owned businesses the last few years. But I think there is growing discontent among the Sinhalese.
With respect, however, to the LLRC, in particular in its recommendations, there has been very little publicity given to the specific recommendations of the LLRC. While the government travels to Geneva with its very pretty packages of its national action plan and describing all that it's doing, in fact within Sri Lanka there is very little publicity given to the LLRC, to what's in it. In fact it took more than a year for it to even be translated into Sinhalese and Tamil, and it's still not widely available by any means.
While I think the recommendations in that commission would have a lot of resonance with people, including Sinhalese, were they known, they are not known. There is a lot of discontent, but it's not clearly articulated in terms of the LLRC.
My final point is, there's unfortunately no effective political opposition to the government. The various opposition parties are disunited, disorganized, and not effectively challenging the government, despite what I think is growing public concern.