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Saturday, May 31, 2025

Jesus or St Francis of Assisi?

by

20121014

Why do peo­ple get in­to pro­fes­sion­al pol­i­tics? One an­swer is pow­er and the abil­i­ty to in­flu­ence who gets what, when, and where from the State, in so do­ing maybe chang­ing or re­in­forc­ing the sta­tus quo a lit­tle. The so­ci­ol­o­gist Max We­ber sug­gest­ed there were two ways to make pol­i­tics one's vo­ca­tion. "Ei­ther one lives 'for' pol­i­tics or one lives 'off' pol­i­tics." You have a call­ing to fight for a cause or you sup­port your­self fi­nan­cial­ly from the pro­fes­sion.

Of course those rea­sons are not ex­clu­sive nor all there is to it. And ob­vi­ous­ly many mod­ern politi­cians would state that they do both-liv­ing for, and from, pol­i­tics at the same time. Eth­i­cal­ly, what might be best for the mass­es are politi­cians who live on­ly "for" pol­i­tics. Why? Well, by hav­ing peo­ple in pol­i­tics who don't wor­ry about what they can take from it and on­ly think about what they can do to im­prove so­ci­ety, we are all best served.

In mod­ern de­mo­c­ra­t­ic sys­tems on­ly those who are re­al­ly wealthy are sup­pos­ed­ly in a po­si­tion to en­ter pol­i­tics im­mune to per­son­al pres­sures of eco­nom­ic vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty af­fect­ing their de­ci­sion-mak­ing and sus­cep­ti­bil­i­ty to bribes and the like.

The irony of this hi­er­ar­chy of po­lit­i­cal moral­i­ty re­veals so­cial con­se­quences. If the pro­fes­sion­al politi­cian's job is best suit­ed to some­one who is not in­flu­enced by their day-to-day fi­nan­cial sit­u­a­tion, then it fol­lows pro­fes­sion­al politi­cians should be in­de­pen­dent­ly wealthy.

Yet do in­de­pen­dent­ly wealthy and prop­er­tied politi­cians re­flect the so­cial and eco­nom­ic re­al­i­ties of the less well off? No. This is be­cause the group in­ter­ests of those with in­de­pen­dent wealth gen­er­al­ly align with the in­ter­ests of those with mon­ey and prop­er­ty.

CLI­CO and HCU are two ex­am­ples of pro­fes­sion­al politi­cians sup­port­ing the sta­tus quo over the greater good and leaves the ques­tion:?is it the prop­erty­less or the prop­er­ty own­er who is best suit­ed moral­ly to im­prov­ing so­cial or­der? The pre­vi­ous pro­fes­sion of a politi­cian is al­so sig­nif­i­cant in who be­comes a pro­fes­sion­al politi­cian.

One rea­son so many lawyers be­come politi­cians isn't a takeover of pol­i­tics to en­act greater billing pow­ers; rathe,r it is a re­flec­tion of so­cial re­al­i­ties. For ex­am­ple, it is rare for an en­tre­pre­neur or busi­nessper­son in their prime to be­come a politi­cian. Such peo­ple are most­ly ir­re­place­able in the con­text of their en­ter­prise or busi­ness, just as many sci­en­tists are in­dis­pens­able to their re­search projects and aren't gen­er­al­ly found as pro­fes­sion­al politi­cians ei­ther.

Lawyers, on the oth­er hand, are over-rep­re­sent­ed as politi­cians. One rea­son is that on the whole, lawyers can make the ca­reer change. Al­so, his­tor­i­cal­ly, lawyers' pro­fes­sion­al in­ter­ests and train­ing have grown along­side the de­vel­op­ment of mod­ern pol­i­tics and the di­vi­sion of labour. Of course, the field of law has pro­duced many great he­roes and fight­ers for so­cial change.

Nonethe­less, on the whole law-like the civ­il ser­vice-is the bu­reau­crat­ic ad­min­is­tra­tion of po­lit­i­cal dom­i­na­tion. Some­one has to do the pa­per­work of gov­ern­ment and pro­vide le­gal­i­ty, or the whole sys­tem of "who gets, what, when, and where" falls in­to vi­o­lence.

In this light, that Fer­gu­son and Gal­barans­ingh might get off be­cause of a Sec­tion 34 blun­der, and hun­dreds of young black men were in­car­cer­at­ed dur­ing the SOE with­out due process be­come two sides of the same coin.

They demon­strate what hap­pens when class in­ter­ests, pol­i­tics and the law meet-as they do in gov­ern­ment. The rich can get off on le­gal tech­ni­cal­i­ties, while the poor have their rights tak­en away com­plete­ly. It high­lights the way pol­i­tics works in the in­ter­ests of cer­tain groups over oth­ers.

So what is to be done? For We­ber the point was: the type of politi­cians we have de­ter­mines the type of so­cial world we have. In this sense pol­i­tics needs moral­i­ty put in­to it rather than a "moral­i­ty all of its own." Un­for­tu­nate­ly the on­ly peo­ple We­ber sug­gest­ed as moral ex­am­ples for pro­fes­sion­al politi­cians were Je­sus and St Fran­cis of As­sisi.

And that was his point. The so­cial world and the po­lit­i­cal world feed in­to each oth­er. The so­cial back­ground of our politi­cians, the char­ac­ter­is­tics of the pro­fes­sions they come from, and their class in­ter­ests all shape the world they make and we have to live in.

Sim­ply put, if we don't put the right mix of in­gre­di­ents in­to the po­lit­i­cal sys­tem we won't get the so­cial changes we want and need out of it.

• Dy­lan Ker­ri­g­an is an an­thro­pol­o­gist at UWI, St Au­gus­tine


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