But Will Elections Change Anything?

Guest Post by Jeffrey A. Tucker

It’s coming up in a fortnight. For many people, all their hopes rest on the outcome. I get it because these seem like very dark times. We cannot live without hope. But we also need realism. The problems are deep, pervasive, scandalously entrenched.

Many people won financially and in terms of power from lockdowns and have no intention either to apologize or give up their gains. What’s more, for that to have happened to this great country – and many great counties – indicates something far more pernicious than a policy error or an ideological mistake.

The fix is going to require vast change. Tragically, the elected politicians may be the least likely to push for such a change. This is due to what we call the “Deep State” but there ought to be another name. It is rather obvious now that we are dealing with a beast that includes media, technology, nonprofits, and multinational and international government agencies and all the groups they represent.

That said, let’s deal here with the most obvious problem: the administrative state.

The plot of every episode of Yes, Minister – a British sitcom that aired in the early 1980s – is pretty much the same. The appointed Minister of the Department of Administrative Affairs waltzes in with a grand and idealistic statement left over from his political campaigns. The permanent secretary who serves him responds affirmatively and then cautions that there might be other considerations to take into account.

The rest follows like clockwork. The other considerations unfold as inevitable or manufactured behind the scenes. For reasons mostly having to do with career concerns – staying out of trouble, advancing through the ranks or avoiding fall down them, pleasing some special interest, obeying the Prime Minister whom we never see, or coming across well in the media – he backs down and reverses his view. It ends as it begins: the permanent secretary gets his way.

The lesson one gains from this hilarious series is that the elected politicians are outnumbered and outwitted on all sides, only pretending to be in charge when in fact the actual affairs of state are managed by experienced professionals with permanent positions. They all know each other. They have mastered the game. They have all the institutional knowledge.

The politicians, on the other hand, are skilled at what they actually do, which is win elections and advance their careers. Their supposed principles are just the veneer put on to please the public.

What makes the series especially painful is that viewers can’t help but put themselves in the position of the Minister of the Department of Administrative Affairs. How would we have done things differently? And if we had, would we have survived? Those are hard questions because the answer is not obvious at all. It seems like the fix is in.

Now, to be sure, in this series all of the players have elements of charm. We laugh at the bureaucracy and their ways. We are delighted by the oddly emerging lack of scruples by the politician. In the end, however, the system seems to work more or less. Maybe this is just how things are supposed to be. It was ever thus and must always be.

Anyone can be forgiven for believing that just a few years ago. But then the last three years happened. The rule by the administrative bureaucracy in every country became highly personal when our churches were closed, the businesses were shut down, we could not travel, we could not go to gyms or theaters, and then they came after every arm insisting that we accept a shot we did not want and most people did not need.

The laughter of the sort Yes, Minister inspired is over. There is far more at stake. But just as the stakes are high, so too the problem of implementing a solution – representative democracy as a means to reobtain liberty itself – is also exceedingly difficult.

All new politicians come in with ideals, just like the Minister in the show. In a matter of weeks, days, or even hours, they are confronted with reality. They need a staff, an experienced staff. Otherwise, they cannot even begin to manage the legislative process or participate in it. They have a massive schedule to keep and this becomes their job rather than enacting change.

Indeed, the entire system seems rigged against change. It starts with the permanent staff on Capitol Hill. It’s a tribe. They move from office to office. They all know each other and also the permanent staff of the bureaucracies who serve the Congress, and they in turn have close relations with the permanent staff of the executive bureaucracies, who in turn have close relationships with the media and the corporate executives lobbying the Congressperson. The naive people, no matter how well intended, are quickly surrounded.

This is essentially what happened to Trump. He figured that as president, he would be like a CEO, not just of all of government but the whole country. Within months, he was shown otherwise. A few months later, he pretty much gave up dealing with Congress. The bureaucracy was off limits. He was being hammered constantly by the media. This is why he very soon resorted to executive orders and the trade power: here he could actually have influence.

It’s shocking that no one seemed to have prepared him for the job. It is always this way, and by intention. It will be this way for all the new Republicans who take office in January 2023 at all levels of government. They will arrive completely unprepared for the task and already set up to fail even at the things they aspire to do that might otherwise be good. It will be a massive uphill climb even as they are being savaged by the media and taught the ways of government by the permanent staff at all levels.

I’m unaware of any training program that alerts them to the dangers they will face if they really seek change. And even if they are aware, it’s not clear what they can do.

This is precisely why there needs to be a focus as never before on the problem of the administrative state. It has to be penetrated and taken apart piece by piece. That will involve not only constant investigations but also courageous bills that seek not cuts but full-on defunding of whole agencies one after another. That’s what it will require to make genuine change.

What’s more, there might only be one chance to do this before it is truly too late. My current read on the situation is that the GOP is not ready for the job. Recall that there was a red wave in 1994 too and essentially nothing good came of it. It was a massive and devastating disappointment.

That cannot be allowed to happen again. In the end, what’s more powerful than political changes and even election upheavals, which too often fail through subversion, are dramatic shifts in public opinion. Every institution ultimately bends to that, which is why research, education, great journalism, and competent media outlets, plus friendship networks and community organizing, might actually be more foundational than elections. All of this has begun and it is growing. Therein lies the real hope.

Otherwise, the red wave might end up as nothing more than another episode of Yes, Minister.

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27 Comments
nonymous
nonymous
November 8, 2022 7:19 pm

There is no political solution.

Walt
Walt
  nonymous
November 8, 2022 7:44 pm

To our troubled evolution.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Walt
November 8, 2022 9:10 pm

Have no faith in constitution.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
November 8, 2022 9:10 pm

There is no bloody revolution.

Red River D
Red River D
  Anonymous
November 8, 2022 10:11 pm

comment image

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Red River D
November 8, 2022 11:17 pm

Was wearing my Police shirt with the symbols on it while brushing my teeth in the mirror. My college roommate saw the symbols (which look like 666 in a mirror) and lost it over the band, the shirt, etc.

tony
tony
November 8, 2022 7:50 pm

no they won’t. the chairsatan of the republican party promised to work with biden to pass his agenda. a vote for republican or democrat is a vote for uniparty and that useless cunt admitted it.

Cedartown Mark
Cedartown Mark
November 8, 2022 8:21 pm

Same as it ever was. Talking Heads, Life During Wartime.

Leah
Leah
November 8, 2022 8:48 pm

No.

Lucredius
Lucredius
  Leah
November 9, 2022 2:07 am

Yes, I concur, NO.
L.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
November 8, 2022 8:59 pm

Once the GOP has 53 senate seats, we can finally get some shit done:
Ban electric cars.
Outlaw buttsex
End women voting

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Iska Waran
November 8, 2022 9:26 pm

end women voting & we can fix this mess we’re in —

Lucredius
Lucredius
  TampaRed
November 9, 2022 2:11 am

thankfully, Mrs. L has never voted. Personally, I gave it up 8 yrs ago.
L.

Boogie
Boogie
  Iska Waran
November 8, 2022 9:53 pm

Same as it ever was. Same as it ever was

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Iska Waran
November 9, 2022 2:09 am

Sorry that you have been deluded but voting ain’t going to fix JACK!
L.

Obbledy
Obbledy
  Anonymous
November 9, 2022 3:28 am

Vote early,vote often

Lostokie
Lostokie
November 8, 2022 9:45 pm

I’m deathly afraid that the only box that will save America is the cartridge box. I hope and pray we don’t have appeal to it.

Lostokie
Lostokie
  Lostokie
November 8, 2022 9:49 pm

on the flip side, I urge everyone to think hard about Acts 17:26-27 -And He has made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on all the face of the earth, and has determined their preappointed times and the boundaries of their dwellings, so that they should seek the Lord, in the hope that they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us;

Machinist
Machinist
  Lostokie
November 9, 2022 4:16 am

My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood and righteousness

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Lostokie
November 8, 2022 11:18 pm

Don’t forget the rickety soap box positioned just below the noose. Another quite useful box.

Hochul sucks
Hochul sucks
November 8, 2022 11:41 pm

“I’m sure after the election your country will improve immediately. ”

-George Carlin

YourAverageJoe
YourAverageJoe
November 9, 2022 6:29 am

I’m amazed at what President Trump was able to accomplish in spite of all the daggers stabbing him in the back.
This was a very good article.

cricket
cricket
  YourAverageJoe
November 9, 2022 9:54 am

Trump accomplished nothing that wasn’t reversed on day one (and week after) when they installed Biden. He made no permanent changes nor restored the Constitutional Republic, nor curbed any corruption, nor shackled the deep state. Matter of fact, he put the deep state in power in his cabinet and abcdefg offices, (fbi, cia too) made them czars , kept the corrupt judges (his power to fire them all). Kept them all there while they were all corrupt, dishonest, unfaithful, lied , fought and plotted against him. He was either immensely ignorant, stupid, willfully blind, controlled, or purposely did those things. Pick one or all. He accomplished NOTHING but temporary stuff.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  cricket
November 9, 2022 10:28 am

Some valid criticism, but criticizing him for not restoring a constitutional republic is a bit much.
Pretty sure he doesn’t know or care what that is.
Anyone who runs for President is, by definition, okay with the system as it is.

cricket
cricket
  Anonymous
November 9, 2022 11:33 am

Major inroads could have been started imo.
If you think it a ‘bit much’ then change it to Constitutional rule of law.
Because now, there is virtually no rule of law enforced and all do as they please.

card802
card802
November 9, 2022 7:23 am

Nope.
My faith in politicians and elections faded long ago. Pondering on the ride into work this morning just where in the world can a person go to avoid the shit storm, nowhere, there’s no place like home I guess.

Marky
Marky
November 9, 2022 2:55 pm

But Will Elections Change Anything?

NO
Wow some really easy questions today