What the politics of People Power tells us about the nature
of government they will preside over
THE LAST WORD | ANDREW M. MWENDA | People Power is the most trending political cult in Uganda. They are angry at the corruption of President Yoweri Museveni and his National Resistance Movement (NRM) government. While its followers carry a deep sense of victimhood, they are not resigned but energised. They want to get Museveni out of power – but what for? To that later!
The cult has a large following across Uganda’s urban
social groups: young professionals, students, unemployed youth, boda boda
riders, hawkers, taxi touts, lumpens (bayaye) and some respectable
intellectuals. But for the most part, cult members are high on emotion and
short on public policy, loud in rhetoric but lacking in organisation. While
most organisations would see this as a handicap, People Power cult members see
this as a virtue. Why?
It is because the cult does not seek power for high
ideals or ideological goals. For all its self-righteousness, it seeks power
primarily to give its supporters a chance at official loot. They are energised
because they see the removal of Museveni as an opportunity get a chance at the
trough. We see this in how they conceptualise political power. They think
anyone who supports Museveni/government has been paid; there exists no
ideological, historical, ethnic, religious or even emotional support for
government.
If I share any sympathy for (and agreement with)
People Power, it is that they are asking for something fundamental i.e. we need
to give a chance to another ethno-regional or even demographic coalition to
come to power and “loot” on behalf of its followers. That is all People Power
offers. What I am not sure about is whether in their greed, cult leaders would
pick a leaf from Museveni i.e. always ensure a continually growing economy to
pay for increasing patronage demands.
NRM came to power promising to fight corruption but
Museveni has presided over the most corrupt government in Uganda’s history.
Museveni, however, is a much more sophisticated individual. He has some belief
that the pursuit of power, while involving exchange of money, can also be
motivated by high ideals and broader ideological goals. It is this nuance that
is missing in the People Power cult.
I no longer hold the utopian belief in the virtues of
term limits on presidents as a key to democracy and accountable government in a
poor country. However, I am inclined to believe that governments, especially in
ethnically fragmented societies like ours, need to change regularly. Presidential
term limits are needed to ensure regular change of power. When a president
retires, the new one should come from a different ethnic region. This way,
ethnic elites can rotate at the trough, thereby ensuring an equitable
distribution of opportunities “for loot” and most likely, political stability.
The fatigue and anger we see in Uganda towards
Museveni is largely because of a deep-seated grievance that “Westerners” have
been at the trough too long. Other ethnic regions need their turn too. Therefore,
the best solution for Uganda (as a federation of ethnicities) is to rotate
power among them. Many intellectuals would be horrified at my suggestion that
patronage and clientelism (otherwise called corruption) is the real basis for
order in poor countries and without it, the state could easily disintegrate.
But this is largely because they are naïve and idealistic.
Museveni has ruled with the same corruption and
patronage as Mobutu of former Zaire. However, he has done this while sustaining
an impressing rate of economic and, therefore, revenue growth. This has allowed
him to continually build the institutional capacity of the state and meet the
demands for more patronage and a bit of welfare. By not sustaining economic
growth, Mobutu ate the hen that was supposed to lay the golden egg of state
consolidation. Museveni has demonstrated that patronage and clientelism
(corruption) are not necessarily injurious to state building but are an
important accompaniment to it.
In his essay “Finishing off with the Idea of the Third
World, The Concept of the Political Trajectory” Jean Francois Bayart argues
that politics must be understood as a moment in a very long-term story. This
can be a story of a civilization, of a culture and of a system of inequalities.
Out of a people’s experience of this past, a past involving external and
endogenous forces, people construct various “discursive genres” through which
politics is understood and participated in. Bayart gives examples of such
genres as the British system of representative government and civil liberties,
Islamic thought, etc.
In Uganda, and indeed across most of Sub Sahara
Africa, the “discursive genre” about political power is “eating.” From
inception, the colonial economy was built as an integral part of politics –
economic resources flowed to those with power. The benefits of modernity (jobs
as chiefs, civil servants, teachers, etc. or allocation of land and trading
licenses) went to those who collaborated with the colonial state.
Thus control of state power became a means of
controlling economic resources and in turn control of economic resources became
a means of reproducing power through neo-patrimonial networks. African elites
did not fight for independence to dismantle the colonial state but to inherit
its privileges. Listening to them, it becomes clear that People Power is the
embodiment of this popular expectation. Given power, it would reproduce exactly
what Museveni has presided over – massive corruption and patronage – but most
likely (and sadly) without his finesse.
We have a rich history from which to draw such a
conclusion. In 2002, Kenyans voted Daniel arap Moi’s KANU out of office because
of its massive corruption. The new president, Mwai Kibaki, even appointed the
indefatigable John Githongo as ombudsman. Githongo had been a leading anti
corruption campaigner working with Transparency International – at one time I
worked under him as a consultant. Under Kibaki, corruption skyrocketed. Within
two years, Githongo had run to exile because the “looting mafia” was closing in
to kill him. If Kenyans thought this was it, today they find the corruption of
the Uhuru Kenyatta government to surpass everything they have witnessed before.
This is the story of Zambia, Malawi, Nigeria, Ghana,
Senegal, Benin, DRC, etc. Change of power, whether violent or peaceful, has led
to more, not less corruption. The lesson is simple but fundamental: corruption
is the way the system works, not the way it fails. People Power supporters
accuse anyone who defends Museveni/government of being paid. This is because
their “discursive genre” of politics is the cash nexus. Give them power and
cash in politics will cease to be king and become emperor.
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