The
Soulbury Commission, announced in 1944 was, like its predecessor, the
Donoughmore Commission, a prime instrument of constitutional reform in
Sri Lanka. The immediate basis for the appointment of a commission for constitutional reforms was the 1944 draft constitution of the Board of Ministers, headed by
D. S. Senanayake. This commission ushered in
Dominion status and Independence to Sri Lanka in 1948. Its constitutional recommendations were largely those of the 1944 Board of Ministers' draft, a document reflecting the influence of Senanayake and his main advisor, Sir
Ivor Jennings Chapter 33).