IV. Politics
as a Vocation
'Politik als Beruf,' Gesammelte Politische
Schriften (Muenchen, l921), pp. 396-450. Originally a speech at Munich
University, 1918, published in 1919 by Duncker & Humblodt, Munich.
This lecture, which I give at your request, will
necessarily disappoint you in a number of ways. You will naturally expect
me to take a position on actual problems of the day. But that will be the
case only in a purely formal way and toward the end, when I shall raise
certain questions concerning the significance of political action in the
whole way of life. In today's lecture, all questions that refer to what
policy and what content one should give one's political activity must be
eliminated. For such questions have nothing to do with the general question
of what politics as a vocation means and what it can mean. Now to our subject
matter.
What do we understand by politics? The concept
is extremely broad and comprises any kind of independent leadership
in action. One speaks of the currency policy of the banks, of the discounting
policy of the Reichsbank, of the strike policy of a trade union; one may
speak of the educational policy of a municipality or a township, of the
policy of the president of a voluntary association, and, finally, even
of the policy of a prudent wife who seeks to guide her husband. Tonight,
our reflections are, of course, not based upon such a broad concept. We
wish to understand by politics only the leadership, or the influencing
of the leadership, of a political association, hence today, of a
state.
But what is a 'political' association from the
sociological point of view? What is a 'state'? Sociologically, the state
cannot be defined in terms of its ends. There is scarcely any task that
some political association has not taken in hand, and there is no task
that one could say has always been exclusive and peculiar to those associations
which are designated as political ones: today the state, or historically,
those associations which have been the predecessors of the modern state.
Ultimately, one can define the modern state sociologically only in terms
of the specific means peculiar to it, as to every political association,
namely, the use of physical force.
'Every state is founded on force,' said Trotsky
at Brest-Litovsk. That is indeed right. If no social institutions existed
which knew the use of violence, then the concept of 'state' would be eliminated,
and a condition would emerge that could be designated as 'anarchy,' in
the specific sense of this word. Of course, force is certainly not the
normal or the only means of the state--nobody says that--but force is a
means specific to the state. Today the relation between the state and violence
is an especially intimate one. In the past, the most varied institutions--beginning
with the sib--have known the use of physical force as quite normal. Today,
however, we have to say that a state is a human community that (successfully)
claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within
a given territory. Note that 'territory' is one of the characteristics
of the state. Specifically, at the present time, the right to use physical
force is ascribed to other institutions or to individuals only to the extent
to which the state permits it. The state is considered the sole source
of the 'right' to use violence. Hence, 'politics' for us means striving
to share power or striving to influence the distribution of power, either
among states or among groups within a state.
This corresponds essentially to ordinary usage.
When a question is said to be a 'political' question, when a cabinet minister
or an official is said to be a 'political' official, or when a decision
is said to be 'politically' determined, what is always meant is that interests
in the distribution, maintenance, or transfer of power are decisive for
answering the questions and determining the decision or the official's
sphere of activity. He who is active in politics strives for power either
as a means in serving other aims, ideal or egoistic, or as 'power for power's
sake,' that is, in order to enjoy the prestige-feeling that power gives.
Like the political institutions historically preceding
it, the state is a relation of men dominating men, a relation supported
by means of legitimate (i.e. considered to be legitimate) violence. If
the state is to exist, the dominated must obey the authority claimed by
the powers that be. When and why do men obey? Upon what inner justifications
and upon what external means does this domination rest?
To begin with, in principle, there are three inner
justifications, hence basic legitimations of domination.
First, the authority of the 'eternal yesterday,'
i.e. of the mores sanctified through the unimaginably ancient recognition
and habitual orientation to conform. This is 'traditional' domination exercised
by the patriarch and the patrimonial prince of yore.
There is the authority of the extraordinary and
personal gift of grace (charisma), the absolutely personal devotion
and personal confidence in revelation, heroism, or other qualities of individual
leadership. This is 'charismatic' domination, as exercised by the prophet
or--in the field of politics--by the elected war lord, the plebiscitarian
ruler, the great demagogue, or the political party leader.
Finally, there is domination by virtue of 'legality,'
by virtue of the belief in the validity of legal statute and functional
'competence' based on rationally created rules. In this case, obedience
is expected in discharging statutory obligations. This is domination as
exercised by the modern 'servant of the state' and by all those bearers
of power who in this respect resemble him.
It is understood that, in reality, obedience is
determined by highly robust motives of fear and hope--fear of the vengeance
of magical powers or of the power-holder, hope for reward in this world
or in the beyond-- and besides all this, by interests of the most varied
sort. Of this we shall speak presently. However, in asking for the 'legitimations'
of this obedience, one meets with these three 'pure' types: 'traditional,'
'charismatic,' and 'legal.'
These conceptions of legitimacy and their inner
justifications are of very great significance for the structure of domination.
To be sure, the pure types are rarely found in reality. But today we cannot
deal with the highly complex variants, transitions, and combinations of
these pure types, which problems belong to 'political science.' Here we
are interested above all in the second of these types: domination by virtue
of the devotion of those who obey the purely personal 'charisma' of the
'leader.' For this is the root of the idea of a calling in its highest
expression.
Devotion to the charisma of the prophet, or the
leader in war, or to the great demagogue in the ecclesia or in parliament,
means that the leader is personally recognized as the innerly 'called'
leader of men. Men do not obey him by virtue of tradition or statute, but
because they believe in him. If he is more than a narrow and vain upstart
of the moment, the leader lives for his cause and 'strives for his work.'1
The devotion of his disciples, his followers, his personal party friends
is oriented to his person and to its qualities.
Charismatic leadership has emerged in all places
and in all historical epochs. Most importantly in the past, it has emerged
in the two figures of the magician and the prophet on the one hand, and
in the elected war lord, the gang leader and condotierre on the
other hand. Political leadership in the form of the free 'demagogue'
who grew from the soil of the city state is of greater concern to us; like
the city state, the demagogue is peculiar to the Occident and especially
to Mediterranean culture. Furthermore, political leadership in the form
of the parliamentary 'party leader' has grown on the soil of the constitutional
state, which is also indigenous only to the Occident.
These politicians by virtue of a 'calling,' in
the most genuine sense of the word, are of course nowhere the only decisive
figures in the cross-currents of the political struggle for power. The
sort of auxiliary means that are at their disposal is also highly decisive.
How do the politically dominant powers manage to maintain their domination?
The question pertains to any kind of domination, hence also to political
domination in all its forms, traditional as well as legal and charismatic.
Organized domination, which calls for continuous
administration, requires that human conduct be conditioned to obedience
towards those masters who claim to be the bearers of legitimate power.
On the other hand, by virtue of this obedience, organized domination requires
the control of those material goods which in a given case are necessary
for the use of physical violence. Thus, organized domination requires control
of the personal executive staff and the material implements of administration.
The administrative staff, which externally represents
the organization of political domination, is, of course, like any other
organization, bound by obedience to the power-holder and not alone by the
concept of legitimacy, of which we have just spoken. There are two other
means, both of which appeal to personal interests: material reward and
social honor. The fiefs of vassals, the prebends of patrimonial officials,
the salaries of modern civil servants, the honor of knights, the privileges
of estates, and the honor of the civil servant comprise their respective
wages. The fear of losing them is the final and decisive basis for solidarity
between the executive staff and the power-holder. There is honor and booty
for the followers in war; for the demagogue's following, there are 'spoils'--that
is, exploitation of the dominated through the monopolization of office--and
there are politically determined profits and premiums of vanity. All of
these rewards are also derived from the domination exercised by a charismatic
leader.
To maintain a dominion by force, certain material
goods are required, just as with an economic organization. All states may
be classified according to whether they rest on the principle that the
staff of men themselves own the administrative means, or whether the staff
is 'separated' from these means of administration. This distinction holds
in the same sense in which today we say that the salaried employee and
the proletarian in the capitalistic enterprise are 'separated' from the
material means of production. The power-holder must be able to count on
the obedience of the staff members, officials, or whoever else they may
be. The administrative means may consist of money, building, war material,
vehicles, horses, or whatnot. The question is whether or not the power-holder
himself directs and organizes the administration while delegating executive
power to personal servants, hired officials, or personal favorites and
confidants, who are non-owners, i.e. who do not use the material means
of administration in their own right but are directed by the lord. The
distinction runs through all administrative organizations of the past.
These political associations in which the material
means of administration are autonomously controlled, wholly or partly,
by the dependent administrative staff may be called associations organized
in 'estates.' The vassal in the feudal association, for instance,
paid out of his own pocket for the administration and judicature of the
district enfeoffed to him. He supplied his own equipment and provisions
for war, and his sub-vassals did likewise. Of course, this had consequences
for the lord's position of power, which only rested upon a relation of
personal faith and upon the fact that the legitimacy of his possession
of the fief and the social honor of the vassal were derived from the overlord.
However, everywhere, reaching back to the earliest
political formations, we also find the lord himself directing the administration.
He seeks to take the administration into his own hands by having men personally
dependent upon him: slaves, household officials, attendants, personal 'favorites,'
and prebendaries enfeoffed in kind or in money from his magazines. He seeks
to defray the expenses from his own pocket, from the revenues of his patrimonium;
and he seeks to create an army which is dependent upon him personally because
it is equipped and provisioned out of his granaries, magazines, and armories.
In the association of 'estates,' the lord rules with the aid of an autonomous
'aristocracy' and hence shares his domination with it; the lord who personally
administers is supported either by members of his household or by plebeians.
These are propertyless strata having no social honor of their own; materially,
they are completely chained to him and are not backed up by any competing
power of their own. All forms of patriarchal and patrimonial domination,
Sultanist despotism, and bureaucratic states belong to this latter type.
The bureaucratic state order is especially important; in its most rational
development, it is precisely characteristic of the modern state.
Everywhere the development of the modern state
is initiated through the action of the prince. He paves the way for the
expropriation of the autonomous and 'private' bearers of executive power
who stand beside him, of those who in their own right possess the means
of administration, warfare, and financial organization, as well as politically
usable goods of all sorts. The whole process is a complete parallel to
the development of the capitalist enterprise through gradual expropriation
of the independent producers. In the end, the modern state controls the
total means of political organization, which actually come together under
a single head. No single official personally owns the money he pays out,
or the buildings, stores, tools, and war machines he controls. In the contemporary
'state'--and this is essential for the concept of state--the 'separation'
of the administrative staff, of the administrative officials, and of the
workers from the material means of administrative organization is completed.
Here the most modern development begins, and we see with our own eyes the
attempt to inaugurate the expropriation of this expropriator of the political
means, and therewith of political power.
The revolution [of Germany, 1918] has accomplished,
at least in so far as leaders have taken the place of the statutory authorities,
this much: the leaders, through usurpation or election, have attained control
over the political staff and the apparatus of material goods; and they
deduce their legitimacy--no matter with what right--from the will of the
governed. Whether the leaders, on the basis of this at least apparent success,
can rightfully entertain the hope of also carrying through the expropriation
within the capitalist enterprises is a different question. The direction
of capitalist enterprises, despite far-reaching analogies, follows quite
different laws than those of political administration.
Today we do not take a stand on this question.
I state only the purely conceptual aspect for our consideration:
the modern state is a compulsory association which organizes domination.
It has been successful in seeking to monopolize the legitimate use of physical
force as a means of domination within a territory. To this end the state
has combined the material means of organization in the hands of its leaders,
and it has expropriated all autonomous functionaries of estates who formerly
controlled these means in their own right. The state has taken their positions
and now stands in the top place.
During this process of political expropriation,
which has occurred with varying success in all countries on earth, 'professional
politicians' in another sense have emerged. They arose first in the service
of a prince. They have been men who, unlike the charismatic leader, have
not wished to be lords themselves, but who have entered the service
of political lords. In the struggle of expropriation, they placed themselves
at the princes' disposal and by managing the princes' politics they earned,
on the one hand, a living and, on the other hand, an ideal content of life.
Again, it is only in the Occident that we find this kind of professional
politician in the service of powers other than the princes. In the past,
they have been the most important power instrument of the prince and his
instrument of political expropriation.
Before discussing 'professional politicians' in
detail, let us clarify in all its aspects the state of affairs their existence
presents. Politics, just as economic pursuits, may be a man's avocation
or his vocation. One may engage in politics, and hence seek to influence
the distribution of power within and between political structures, as an
'occasional' politician. We are all 'occasional' politicians when we cast
our ballot or consummate a similar expression of intention, such as applauding
or protesting in a 'political' meeting, or delivering a 'political' speech,
etc. The whole relation of many people to politics is restricted to this.
Politics as an avocation is today practiced by all those party agents and
heads of voluntary political associations who, as a rule, are politically
active only in case of need and for whom politics is, neither materially
nor ideally, 'their life' in the first place. The same holds for those
members of state counsels and similar deliberative bodies that function
only when summoned. It also holds for rather broad strata of our members
of parliament who are politically active only during sessions. In the past,
such strata were found especially among the estates. Proprietors of military
implements in their own right, or proprietors of goods important for the
administration, or proprietors of personal prerogatives may be called 'estates.'
A large portion of them were far from giving their lives wholly, or merely
preferentially, or more than occasionally, to the service of politics.
Rather, they exploited their prerogatives in the interest of gaining rent
or even profits; and they became active in the service of political associations
only when the overlord of their status-equals especially demanded it. It
was not different in the case of some of the auxiliary forces which the
prince drew into the struggle for the creation of a political organization
to be exclusively at his disposal. This was the nature of the Rate von
Haus aus [councilors] and, still further back, of a considerable part
of the councilors assembling in the 'Curia' and other deliberating bodies
of the princes. But these merely occasional auxiliary forces engaging in
politics on the side were naturally not sufficient for the prince. Of necessity,
the prince sought to create a staff of helpers dedicated wholly and exclusively
to serving him, hence making this their major vocation. The structure of
the emerging dynastic political organization, and not only this but the
whole articulation of the culture, depended to a considerable degree upon
the question of where the prince recruited agents.
A staff was also necessary for those political
associations whose members constituted themselves politically as (so-called)
'free' communes under the complete abolition or the far-going restriction
of princely power.
They were 'free' not in the sense of freedom from
domination by force, but in the sense that princely power legitimized by
tradition (mostly religiously sanctified) as the exclusive source of all
authority was absent. These communities have their historical home in the
Occident. Their nucleus was the city as a body politic, the form in which
the city first emerged in the Mediterranean culture area. In all these
cases, what did the politicians who made politics their major vocation
look like?
There are two ways of making politics one's vocation:
Either one lives 'for' politics or one lives 'off' politics. By no means
is this contrast an exclusive one. The rule is, rather, that man does both,
at least in thought, and certainly he also does both in practice. He who
lives 'for' politics makes politics his life, in an internal sense. Either
he enjoys the naked possession of the power he exerts, or he nourishes
his inner balance and self-feeling by the consciousness that his life has
meaning in the service of a 'cause.' In this internal sense, every
sincere man who lives for a cause also lives off this cause. The distinction
hence refers to a much more substantial aspect of the matter, namely, to
the economic. He who strives to make politics a permanent source of
income lives 'off' politics as a vocation, whereas he who does not
do this lives 'for' politics. Under the dominance of the private property
order, some--if you wish--very trivial preconditions must exist in order
for a person to be able to live 'for' politics in this economic sense.
Under normal conditions, the politician must be economically independent
of the income politics can bring him. This means, quite simply, that the
politician must be wealthy or must have a personal position in life which
yields a sufficient income
This is the case, at least in normal circumstances.
The war lord's following is just as little concerned about the conditions
of a normal economy as is the street crowd following of the revolutionary
hero. Both live off booty, plunder, confiscations, contributions, and the
imposition of worthless and compulsory means of tender, which in essence
amounts to the same thing. But necessarily, these are extraordinary phenomena.
In everyday economic life, only some wealth serves the purpose of making
a man economically independent. Yet this alone does not suffice. The professional
politician must also be economically 'dispensable,' that is, his income
must not depend upon the fact that he constantly and personally places
his ability and thinking entirely, or at least by far predominantly, in
the service of economic acquisition. In the most unconditional way, the
rentier is dispensable in this sense. Hence, he is a man who receives completely
unearned income. He may be the territorial lord of the past or the large
landowner and aristocrat of the present who receives ground rent. In Antiquity
and the Middle Ages they who received slave or serf rents or in modern
times rents from shares or bonds or similar sources--these are rentiers.
Neither the worker nor--and this has to be noted
well--the entrepreneur, especially the modern, large-scale entrepreneur,
is economically dispensable in this sense. For it is precisely the entrepreneur
who is tied to his enterprise and is therefore not dispensable.
This holds for the entrepreneur in industry far more than for the entrepreneur
in agriculture, considering the seasonal character of agriculture. In the
main, it is very difficult for the entrepreneur to be represented in his
enterprise by someone else, even temporarily. He is as little dispensable
as is the medical doctor, and the more eminent and busy he is the less
dispensable he is. For purely organizational reasons, it is easier for
the lawyer to be dispensable; and therefore the lawyer has played an incomparably
greater, and often even a dominant, role as a professional politician.
We shall not continue in this classification; rather let us clarify some
of its ramifications.
The leadership of a state or of a party by men
who (in the economic sense of the word) live exclusively for politics and
not off politics means necessarily a 'plutocratic' recruitment of the leading
political strata. To be sure, this does not mean that such plutocratic
leadership signifies at the same time that the politically dominant strata
will not also seek to live 'off' politics, and hence that the dominant
stratum will not usually exploit their political domination in their own
economic interest. All that is unquestionable, of course. There has never
been such a stratum that has not somehow lived 'off' politics. Only this
is meant: that the professional politician need not seek remuneration directly
for his political work, whereas every politician without means must absolutely
claim this. On the other hand, we do not mean to say that the propertyless
politician will pursue private economic advantages through politics, exclusively,
or even predominantly. Nor do we mean that he will not think, in the first
place, of 'the subject matter.' Nothing would be more incorrect. According
to all experience, a care for the economic 'security' of his existence
is consciously or unconsciously a cardinal point in the whole life orientation
of the wealthy man. A quite reckless and unreserved political idealism
is found if not exclusively at least predominantly among those strata who
by virtue of their propertylessness stand entirely outside of the strata
who are interested in maintaining the economic order of a given society.
This holds especially for extraordinary and hence revolutionary epochs.
A non-plutocratic recruitment of interested politicians, of leadership
and following, is geared to the self-understood precondition that regular
and reliable income will accrue to those who manage politics.
Either politics can be conducted 'honorifically'
and then, as one usually says, by 'independent,' that is, by wealthy, men,
and especially by rentiers. Or, political leadership is made accessible
to propertyless men who must then be rewarded. The professional politician
who lives 'off' politics may be a pure 'prebendary' or a salaried 'official.'
Then the politician receives either income from fees and perquisites for
specific services--tips and bribes are only an irregular and formally illegal
variant of this category of income--or a fixed income in kind, a money
salary, or both. He may assume the character of an 'entrepreneur,' like
the condottiere or the holder of a farmed-out or purchased office,
or like the American boss who considers his costs a capital investment
which he brings to fruition through exploitation of his influence. Again,
he may receive a fixed wage, like a journalist, a party secretary, a modern
cabinet minister, or a political official. Feudal fiefs, land grants, and
prebends of all sorts have been typical, in the past. With the development
of the money economy, perquisites and prebends especially are the typical
rewards for the following of princes, victorious conquerors, or successful
party chiefs. For loyal services today, party leaders give offices of all
sorts--in parties, newspapers, co-operative societies, health insurance,
municipalities, as well as in the state. All party struggles are
struggles for the patronage of office, as well as struggles for objective
goals.
In Germany, all struggles between the proponents
of local and of central government are focused upon the question of which
powers shall control the patronage of office, whether they are of Berlin,
Munich, Karlsruhe, or Dresden. Setbacks in participating in offices are
felt more severely by parties than is action against their objective goals.
In France, a turnover of prefects because of party politics has always
been considered a greater transformation and has always caused a greater
uproar than a modification in the government's program--the latter almost
having the significance of mere verbiage. Some parties, especially those
in America since the disappearance of the old conflicts concerning the
interpretation of the constitution, have become pure patronage parties
handing out jobs and changing their material program according to the chances
of grabbing votes.
In Spain, up to recent years, the two great parties,
in a conventionally fixed manner, took turns in office by means of 'elections,'
fabricated from above, in order to provide their followers with offices.
In the Spanish colonial territories, in the so-called 'elections,' as well
as in the so-called 'revolutions,' what was at stake was always the state
bread-basket from which the victors wished to be fed.
In Switzerland, the parties peacefully divided
the offices among themselves proportionately, and some of our 'revolutionary'
constitutional drafts, for instance the first draft of the Badenian constitution,
sought to extend this system to ministerial positions. Thus, the state
and state offices were considered as pure institutions for the provision
of spoilsmen.
Above all, the Catholic Center party was enthusiastically
for this draft. In Badenia, the party, as part of the party platform, made
the distribution of offices proportional to confessions and hence without
regard to achievement. This tendency becomes stronger for all parties when
the number of offices increase as a result of general bureaucratization
and when the demand for offices increases because they represent specifically
secure livelihoods. For their followings, the parties become more and more
a means to the end of being provided for in this manner.
The development of modern officialdom into a highly
qualified, professional labor force, specialized in expertness through
long years of preparatory training, stands opposed to all these arrangements.
Modern bureaucracy in the interest of integrity has developed a high sense
of status honor; without this sense the danger of an awful corruption and
a vulgar Philistinism threatens fatally. And without such integrity, even
the purely technical functions of the state apparatus would be endangered.
The significance of the state apparatus for the economy has been steadily
rising, especially with increasing socialization, and its significance
will be further augmented.
In the United States, amateur administration through
booty politicians in accordance with the outcome of presidential elections
resulted in the exchange of hundreds of thousands of officials, even down
to the mail carrier. The administration knew nothing of the professional
civil servant-for-life, but this amateur administration has long since
been punctured by the Civil Service Reform. Purely technical, irrefrageable
needs of the administration have determined this development.
In Europe, expert officialdom, based on the division
of labor, has emerged in a gradual development of half a thousand years.
The Italian cities and seigniories were the beginning, among the monarchies,
and the states of the Norman conquerors. But the decisive step was taken
in connection with the administration of the finances of the prince. With
the administrative reforms of Emperor Max, it can be seen how hard it was
for the officials to depose successfully of the prince in this field, even
under the pressure of extreme emergency and of Turkish rule. The sphere
of finance could afford least of all a ruler's dilettantism--a ruler who
at that time was still above all a knight. The development of war technique
called forth the expert and specialized officer; the differentiation of
legal procedure called forth the trained jurist. In these three areas--finance,
war, and law--expert officialdom in the more advanced states was definitely
triumphant during the sixteenth century. With the ascendancy of princely
absolutism over the estates, there was simultaneously a gradual abdication
of the prince's autocratic rule in favor of an expert officialdom. These
very officials had only facilitated the prince's victory over the estates.
The development of the 'leading politicians' was
realized along with the ascendancy of the specially trained officialdom,
even if in far less noticeable transitions. Of course, such really decisive
advisers of the princes have existed at all times and all over the world.
In the Orient, the need for relieving the Sultan as far as possible from
personal responsibility for the success of the government has created the
typical figure of the 'Grand Vizier.' In the Occident, influenced above
all by the reports of the Venetian legates, diplomacy first became a consciously
cultivated art in the age of Charles V, in Machiavelli's time. The reports
of the Venetian legates were read with passionate zeal in expert diplomatic
circles. The adepts of this art, who were in the main educated humanistically,
treated one another as trained initiates, similar to the humanist Chinese
statesmen in the last period of the 'warring states. The necessity of a
formally unified guidance of the whole policy, including that of home affairs,
by a leading statesman finally and compellingly arose only through constitutional
development. Of course, individual personalities, such as advisers of the
princes, or rather, in fact, leaders, had again and again existed before
then. But the organization of administrative agencies even in the most
advanced states first proceeded along other avenues. Top collegial administrative
agencies had emerged. In theory, and to a gradually decreasing extent in
fact, they met under the personal chairmanship of the prince who rendered
the decision. This collegial system led to memoranda, counter-memoranda,
and reasoned votes of the majority and the minority. In addition to the
official and highest authorities, the prince surrounded himself with purely
personal confidants--the 'cabinet'--and through them rendered his decisions,
after considering the resolutions of the state counsel, or whatever else
the highest state agency was called. The prince, coming more and more into
the position of a dilettante, sought to extricate himself from the unavoidably
increasing weight of the expertly trained officials through the collegial
system and the cabinet. He sought to retain the highest leadership in his
own hands. This latent struggle between expert officialdom and autocratic
rule existed everywhere. Only in the face of parliaments and the power
aspirations of party leaders did the situation change. Very different conditions
led to the externally identical result, though to be sure with certain
differences. Wherever the dynasties retained actual power in their hands--as
was especially the case in Germany--the interests of the prince were joined
with those of officialdom against parliament and its claims for
power. The officials were also interested in having leading positions,
that is, ministerial positions, occupied by their own ranks, thus making
these positions an object of the official career. The monarch, on his part,
was interested in being able to appoint the ministers from the ranks of
devoted officials according to his own discretion. Both parties, however,
were interested in seeing the political leadership confront parliament
in a unified and solidary fashion, and hence in seeing the collegial system
replaced by a single cabinet head. Furthermore, in order to be removed
in a purely formal way from the struggle of parties and from party attacks,
the monarch needed a single personality to cover him and to assume responsibility,
that is, to answer to parliament and to negotiate with the parties. All
these interests worked together and in the same direction: a minister emerged
to direct the officialdom in a unified way.
Where parliament gained supremacy over the monarch--as
in England--the development of parliamentary power worked even more strongly
in the direction of a unification of the state apparatus. In England, the
'cabinet,' with the single head of Parliament as its 'leader,' developed
as a committee of the party which at the time controlled the majority.
This party power was ignored by official law but, in fact, it alone was
politically decisive. The official collegial bodies as such were not organs
of the actual ruling power, the party, and hence could not be the bearers
of real government. The ruling party required an ever-ready organization
composed only of its actually leading men, who would confidentially discuss
matters in order to maintain power within and be capable of engaging in
grand politics outside. The cabinet is simply this organization. However,
in relation to the public, especially the parliamentary public, the party
needed a leader responsible for all decisions--the cabinet head. The English
system has been taken over on the Continent in the form of parliamentary
ministries. In America alone, and in the democracies influenced by America,
a quite heterogeneous system was placed into opposition with this system.
The American system placed the directly and popularly elected leader of
the victorious party at the head of the apparatus of officials appointed
by him and bound him to the consent of 'parliament' only in budgetary and
legislative matters.
The development of politics into an organization
which demanded training in the struggle for power, and in the methods of
this struggle as developed by modern party policies, determined the separation
of public functionaries into two categories, which, however, are by no
means rigidly but nevertheless distinctly separated. These categories are
'administrative' officials on the one hand, and 'political' officials on
the other. The 'political' officials, in the genuine sense of the word,
can regularly and externally be recognized by the fact that they can be
transferred any time at will, that they can be dismissed, or at least temporarily
withdrawn. They are like the French prefects and the comparable officials
of other countries, and this is in sharp contrast to the 'independence'
of officials with judicial functions. In England, officials who, according
to fixed convention, retire from office when there is a change in the parliamentary
majority, and hence a change in the cabinet, belong to this category. There
are usually among them some whose competence includes the management of
the general 'inner administration.' The political element consists, above
all, in the task of maintaining 'law and order' in the country, hence maintaining
the existing power relations. In Prussia these officials, in accordance
with Puttkamer's decree and in order to avoid censure, were obliged to
'represent the policy of the government.' And, like the prefects in France,
they were used as an official apparatus for influencing elections. Most
of the 'political' officials of the German system--in contrast to other
countries--were equally qualified in so far as access to these offices
required a university education, special examinations, and special preparatory
service. In Germany, only the heads of the political apparatus, the ministers,
lack this specific characteristic of modern civil service. Even under the
old regime, one could be the Prussian minister of education without ever
having attended an institution of higher learning; whereas one could become
Vortragender Rat, 2 in principle, only on the basis of
a prescribed examination. The specialist and trained Dezernent 3
and Vortragender Rat were of course infinitely better informed about
the real technical problems of the division than was their respective chief--for
instance, under Althoff in the Prussian ministry of education. In England
it was not different. Consequently, in all routine demands the divisional
head was more powerful than the minister, which was not without reason.
The minister was simply the representative of the political power constellation;
he had to represent these powerful political staffs and he had to take
measure of the proposals of his subordinate expert officials or give them
directive orders of a political nature.
After all, things in a private economic enterprise
are quite similar: the real 'sovereign,' the assembled shareholders, is
just as little influential in the business management as is a 'people'
ruled by expert officials. And the personages who decide the policy of
the enterprise, the bank-controlled 'directorate,' give only directive
economic orders and select persons for the management without themselves
being capable of technically directing the enterprise. Thus the present
structure of the revolutionary state signifies nothing new in principle.
It places power over the administration into the hands of absolute dilettantes,
who, by virtue of their control of the machine-guns, would like to use
expert officials only as executive heads and hands. The difficulties of
the present system lie elsewhere than here, but today these difficulties
shall not concern us. We shall, rather, ask for the typical peculiarity
of the professional politicians, of the 'leaders' as well as their followings.
Their nature has changed and today varies greatly from one case to another.
We have seen that in the past 'professional politicians'
developed through the struggle of the princes with the estates and that
they served the princes. Let us briefly review the major types of these
professional politicians.
Confronting the estates, the prince found support
in politically exploitable strata outside of the order of the estates.
Among the latter, there was, first, the clergy in Western and Eastern India,
in Buddhist China and Japan, and in Lamaist Mongolia, just as in the Christian
territories of the Middle Ages. The clergy were technically useful because
they were literate. The importation of Brahmins, Buddhist priests, Lamas,
and the employment of bishops and priests as political counselors, occurred
with an eye to obtaining administrative forces who could read and write
and who could be used in the struggle of the emperor, prince, or Khan against
the aristocracy. Unlike the vassal who confronted his overlord, the cleric,
especially the celibate cleric, stood outside the machinery of normal political
and economic interests and was not tempted by the struggle for political
power, for himself or for his descendants. By virtue of his own status,
the cleric was 'separated' from the managerial implements of princely administration.
The humanistically educated literati comprised
a second such stratum. There was a time when one learned to produce Latin
speeches and Greek verses in order to become a political adviser to a prince
and, above all things, to become a memorialist. This was the time of the
first flowering of the humanist schools and of the princely foundations
of professorships for 'poetics.' This was for us a transitory epoch, which
has had a quite persistent influence upon our educational system, yet no
deeper results politically. In East Asia, it has been different. The Chinese
mandarin is, or rather originally was, what the humanist of our Renaissance
period approximately was: a literator humanistically trained and tested
in the language monuments of the remote past. When you read the diaries
of Li Hung Chang you will find that he is most proud of having composed
poems and of being a good calligrapher. This stratum, with its conventions
developed and modeled after Chinese Antiquity, has determined the whole
destiny of China; and perhaps our fate would have been similar if the humanists
in their time had had the slightest chance of gaining a similar influence.
The third stratum was the court nobility. After
the princes had succeeded in expropriating political power from the nobility
as an estate, they drew the nobles to the court and used them in their
political and diplomatic service. The transformation of our educational
system in the seventeenth century was partly determined by the fact that
court nobles as professional politicians displaced the humanist literati
and entered the service of the princes.
The fourth category was a specifically English
institution. A patrician stratum developed there which was comprised of
the petty nobility and the urban rentiers; technically they are called
the 'gentry.' The English gentry represents a stratum that the prince originally
attracted in order to counter the barons. The prince placed the stratum
in possession of the offices of 'self-government,' and later he himself
became increasingly dependent upon them. The gentry maintained the possession
of all offices of local administration by taking them over without compensation
in the interest of their own social power. The gentry has saved England
from the bureaucratization which has been the fate of all continental states.
A fifth stratum, the university-trained jurist,
is peculiar to the Occident, especially to the European continent, and
has been of decisive significance for the Continent's whole political structure.
The tremendous after-effect of Roman law, as transformed by the late Roman
bureaucratic state, stands out in nothing more clearly than the fact that
everywhere the revolution of political management in the direction of the
evolving rational state has been borne by trained jurists. This also occurred
in England, although there the great national guilds of jurists hindered
the reception of Roman law. There is no analogy to this process to be found
in any area of the world.
All beginnings of rational juristic thinking in
the Indian Mimamsa School and all further cultivation of the ancient juristic
thinking in Islam have been unable to prevent the idea of rational law
from being overgrown by theological forms of thought. Above all, legal
trial procedure has not been fully rationalized in the cases of India and
of Islamism. Such rationalization has been brought about on the Continent
only through the borrowing of ancient Roman jurisprudence by the Italian
jurists. Roman jurisprudence is the product of a political structure arising
from the city state to world domination--a product of quite unique nature.
The usus modernus of the late medieval pandect jurists and canonists
was blended with theories of natural law, which were born from juristic
and Christian thought and which were later secularized. This juristic rationalism
has had its great representatives among the Italian Podesta, the French
crown jurists (who created the formal means for the undermining of the
rule of seigneurs by royal power), among the canonists and the theologians
of the ecclesiastic councils (thinking in terms of natural law), among
the court jurists and academic judges of the continental princes, among
the Netherland teachers of natural law and the monarchomachists, among
the English crown and parliamentary jurists, among the noblesse de robe
of the French Parliament, and finally, among the lawyers of the age of
the French Revolution.
Without this juristic rationalism, the rise of
the absolute state is just as little imaginable as is the Revolution. If
you look through the remonstrances of the French Parliaments or through
the cahiers of the French Estates-General from the sixteenth century to
the year 1789, you will find everywhere the spirit of the jurists. And
if you go over the occupational composition of the members of the French
Assembly, you will find there--although the members of the Assembly were
elected through equal franchise--a single proletarian, very few bourgeois
enterprisers, but jurists of all sorts, en masse. Without them,
the specific mentality that inspired these radical intellectuals and their
projects would be quite inconceivable. Since the French Revolution, the
modern lawyer and modern democracy absolutely belong together. And lawyers,
in our sense of an independent status group, also exist only in the Occident.
They have developed since the Middle Ages from the Fursprech of
the formalistic Germanic legal procedure under the impact of the rationalization
of the trial.
The significance of the lawyer in Occidental politics
since the rise of parties is not accidental. The management of politics
through parties simply means management through interest groups. We shall
soon see what that means. The craft of the trained lawyer is to plead effectively
the cause of interested clients. In this, the lawyer is superior to any
'official,' as the superiority of enemy propaganda [Allied propaganda 1914-18]
could teach us. Certainly he can advocate and win a cause supported by
logically weak arguments and one which, in this sense, is a 'weak' cause.
Yet he wins it because technically he makes a 'strong case' for it. But
only the lawyer successfully pleads a cause that can be supported by logically
strong arguments, thus handling a 'good' cause 'well.' All too often the
civil servant as a politician turns a cause that is good in every sense
into a 'weak' cause, through technically 'weak' pleading. This is what
we have had to experience. To an outstanding degree, politics today is
in fact conducted in public by means of the spoken or written word. To
weigh the effect of the word properly falls within the range of the lawyer's
tasks; but not at all into that of the civil servant. The latter is no
demagogue, nor is it his purpose to be one. If he nevertheless tries to
become a demagogue, he usually becomes a very poor one.
According to his proper vocation, the genuine
official--and this is decisive for the evaluation of our former regime--will
not engage in politics. Rather, he should engage in impartial 'administration.'
This also holds for the so called 'political' administrator, at least officially,
in so far as the raison d'etat, that is, the vital interests of
the ruling order, are not in question. Sine ira et studio, 'without
scorn and bias,' he shall administer his office. Hence, he shall not do
precisely what the politician, the leader as well as his following, must
always and necessarily do, namely, fight.
To take a stand, to be passionate--ira et studium--is
the politician's element, and above all the element of the political leader.
His conduct is subject to quite a different, indeed, exactly the opposite,
principle of responsibility from that of the civil servant. The honor of
the civil servant is vested in his ability to execute conscientiously the
order of the superior authorities, exactly as if the order agreed with
his own conviction. This holds even if the order appears wrong to him and
if, despite the civil servant's remonstrances, the authority insists on
the order. Without this moral discipline and self-denial, in the highest
sense, the whole apparatus would fall to pieces. The honor of the political
leader, of the leading statesman, however, lies precisely in an exclusive
personal responsibility for what he does, a responsibility he cannot
and must not reject or transfer. It is in the nature of officials of high
moral standing to be poor politicians, and above all, in the political
sense of the word, to be irresponsible politicians. In this sense, they
are politicians of low moral standing, such as we unfortunately have had
again and again in leading positions. This is what we have called Beamtenherrschaft
[civil-service rule], and truly no spot soils the honor of our officialdom
if we reveal what is politically wrong with the system from the standpoint
of success. But let us return once more to the types of political figures.
Since the time of the constitutional state, and
definitely since democracy has been established, the 'demagogue' has been
the typical political leader in the Occident. The distasteful flavor of
the word must not make us forget that not Cleon but Pericles was the first
to bear the name of demagogue. In contrast to the offices of ancient democracy
that were filled by lot, Pericles led the sovereign Ecclesia of
the demos of Athens as a supreme strategist holding the only elective office
or without holding any office at all. Modern demagoguery also makes use
of oratory, even to a tremendous extent, if one considers the election
speeches a modern candidate has to deliver. But the use of the printed
word is more enduring. The political publicist, and above all the journalist,
is nowadays the most important representative of the demagogic species.
Within the limits of this lecture, it is quite
impossible even to sketch the sociology of modern political journalism,
which in every respect constitutes a chapter in itself. Certainly, only
a few things concerning it are in place here. In common with all demagogues
and, by the way, with the lawyer (and the artist), the journalist shares
the fate of lacking a fixed social classification. At least, this is the
case on the Continent, in contrast to the English, and, by the way, also
to former conditions in Prussia. The journalist belongs to a sort of pariah
caste, which is always estimated by 'society' in terms of its ethically
lowest representative. Hence, the strangest notions about journalists and
their work are abroad. Not everybody realizes that a really good journalistic
accomplishment requires at least as much 'genius' 4 as any scholarly
accomplishment, especially because of the necessity of producing at once
and 'on order,' and because of the necessity of being effective, to be
sure, under quite different conditions of production. It is almost never
acknowledged that the responsibility of the journalist is far greater,
and that the sense of responsibility of every honorable journalist is,
on the average, not a bit lower than that of the scholar, but rather, as
the war has shown, higher. This is because, in the very nature of the case,
irresponsible journalistic accomplishments and their often terrible effects
are remembered.
Nobody believes that the discretion of any able
journalist ranks above the average of other people, and yet that is the
case. The quite incomparably graver temptations, and the other conditions
that accompany journalistic work at the present time, produce those results
which have conditioned the public to regard the press with a mixture of
disdain and pitiful cowardice. Today we cannot discuss what is to be done.
Here we are interested in the question of the occupational destiny of the
political journalist and of his chance to attain a position of political
leadership. Thus far, the journalist has had favorable chances only in
the Social Democratic party. Within the party, editorial positions have
been predominantly in the nature of official positions, but editorial positions
have not been the basis for positions of leadership.
In the bourgeois parties, on the whole, the chances
for ascent to political power along this avenue have rather become worse,
as compared with those of the previous generation. Naturally every politician
of consequence has needed influence over the press and hence has needed
relations with the press. But that party leaders would emerge from the
ranks of the press has been an absolute exception and one should not have
expected it. The reason for this lies in the strongly increased 'indispensability'
of the journalist, above all, of the propertyless and hence professionally
bound journalist, an indispensability which is determined by the tremendously
increased intensity and tempo of journalistic operations. The necessity
of gaining one's livelihood by the writing of daily or at least weekly
articles is like lead on the feet of the politicians. I know of cases in
which natural leaders have been permanently paralyzed in their ascent to
power, externally and above all internally, by this compulsion. The relations
of the press to the ruling powers in the state and in the parties, under
the old regime [of the Kaiser], were as detrimental as they could be to
the level of journalism; but that is a chapter in itself. These conditions
were different in the countries of our opponents [the Allies]. But there
also, and for all modern states, apparently the journalist worker gains
less and less as the capitalist lord of the press, of the sort of 'Lord'
Northcliffe, for instance, gains more and more political influence.
Thus far, however, our great capitalist newspaper
concerns, which attained control, especially over the 'chain newspapers,'
with 'want ads,' have been regularly and typically the breeders of political
indifference. For no profits could be made in an independent policy; especially
no profitable benevolence of the politically dominant powers could be obtained.
The advertising business is also the avenue along which, during the war,
the attempt was made to influence the press politically in a grand style--an
attempt which apparently it is regarded as desirable to continue now. Although
one may expect the great papers to escape this pressure, the situation
of the small ones will be far more difficult. In any case, for the time
being, the journalist career is not among us, a normal avenue for the ascent
of political leaders, whatever attraction journalism may otherwise have
and whatever measure of influence, range of activity, and especially political
responsibility it may yield. One has to wait and see. Perhaps journalism
does not have this function any longer, or perhaps journalism does not
yet have it. Whether the renunciation of the principle of anonymity would
mean a change in this is difficult to say. Some journalists--not all--believe
in dropping principled anonymity. What we have experienced during the war
in the German press, and in the 'management' of newspapers by especially
hired personages and talented writers who always expressly figured under
their names, has unfortunately shown, in some of the better known cases,
that an increased awareness of responsibility is not so certain to be bred
as might be believed. Some of the papers were, without regard to party,
precisely the notoriously worst boulevard sheets; by dropping anonymity
they strove for and attained greater sales. The publishers as well as the
journalists of sensationalism have gained fortunes but certainly not honor.
Nothing is here being said against the principle of promoting sales; the
question is indeed an intricate one, and the phenomenon of irresponsible
sensationalism does not hold in general. But thus far, sensationalism has
not been the road to genuine leadership or to the responsible management
of politics. How conditions will further develop remains to be seen. Yet
the journalist career remains under all circumstances one of the most important
avenues of professional political activity. It is not a road for everybody,
least of all for weak characters, especially for people who can maintain
their inner balance only with a secure status position. If the life of
a young scholar is a gamble, still he is walled in by firm status conventions,
which prevent him from slipping. But the journalist's life is an absolute
gamble in every respect and under conditions that test one's inner security
in a way that scarcely occurs in any other situation. The often bitter
experiences in occupational life are perhaps not even the worst. The inner
demands that are directed precisely at the successful journalist are especially
difficult. It is, indeed, no small matter to frequent the salons of the
powerful on this earth on a seemingly equal footing and often to be flattered
by all because one is feared, yet knowing all the time that having hardly
closed the door the host has perhaps to justify before his guests his association
with the 'scavengers from the press.' Moreover, it is no small matter that
one must express oneself promptly and convincingly about this and that,
on all conceivable problems of life--whatever the 'market' happens to demand--and
this without becoming absolutely shallow and above all without losing one's
dignity by baring oneself, a thing which has merciless results. It is not
astonishing that there are many journalists who have become human failures
and worth less men. Rather, it is astonishing that, despite all this, this
very stratum includes such a great number of valuable and quite genuine
men, a fact that outsiders would not so easily guess.
If the journalist as a type of professional politician
harks back to a rather considerable past, the figure of the party official
belongs only to the development of the last decades and, in part, only
to recent years. In order to comprehend the position of this figure in
historical evolution, we shall have to turn to a consideration of parties
and party organizations.
In all political associations which are somehow
extensive, that is, associations going beyond the sphere and range of the
tasks of small rural districts where power-holders are periodically elected,
political organization is necessarily managed by men interested in the
management of politics. This is to say that a relatively small number of
men are primarily interested in political life and hence interested in
sharing political power. They provide themselves with a following through
free recruitment, present themselves or their proteges as candidates for
election, collect the financial means, and go out for vote-grabbing. It
is unimaginable how in large associations elections could function at all
without this managerial pattern. In practice this means the division of
the citizens with the right to vote into politically active and politically
passive elements. This difference is based on voluntary attitudes, hence
it cannot be abolished through measures like obligatory voting, or 'occupational
status group' representation, or similar measures that are expressly or
actually directed against this state of affairs and the rule of professional
politicians. The active leadership and their freely recruited following
are the necessary elements in the life of any party. The following, and
through it the passive electorate, are necessary for the election of the
leader. But the structure of parties varies. For instance, the 'parties'
of the medieval cities, such as those of the Guelfs and the Ghibellines,
were purely personal followings. If one considers various things about
these medieval parties, one is reminded of Bolshevism and its Soviets.
Consider the Statuta della perta Guelfa, the confiscations of the
Nobili's estates--which originally meant all those families who lived a
chivalrous life and who thus qualified for fiefs--consider the exclusion
from office-holding and the denial of the right to vote, the inter-local
party committees, the strictly military organizations and the premiums
for informers. Then consider Bolshevism with its strictly sieved military
and, in Russia especially, informer organizations, the disarmament and
denial of the political rights of the 'bourgeois,' that is, of the entrepreneur,
trader, rentier, clergyman, descendants of the dynasty, police agents,
as well as the confiscation policy.
This analogy is still more striking when one considers
that, on the one hand, the military organization of the medieval party
constituted a pure army of knights organized on the basis of the registered
feudal estates and that nobles occupied almost all leading positions, and,
on the other hand, that the Soviets have preserved, or rather reintroduced,
the highly paid enterpriser, the group wage, the Taylor system, military
and work-shop discipline, and a search for foreign capital. Hence, in a
word, the Soviets have had to accept again absolutely all the things
that Bolshevism had been fighting as bourgeois class institutions. They
have had to do this in order to keep the state and the economy going at
all. Moreover, the Soviets have reinstituted the agents of the former Ochrana
[Tsarist Secret Police] as the main instrument of their state power. But
here we do not have to deal with such organizations for violence, but rather
with professional politicians who strive for power through sober and 'peaceful'
party campaigns in the market of election votes.
Parties, in the sense usual with us, were at first,
for instance in England, pure followings of the aristocracy. If, for any
reason whatever, a peer changed his party, everybody dependent upon him
likewise changed. Up to the Reform Bill [of 1832], the great noble families
and, last but not least, the king controlled the patronage of an immense
number of election boroughs. Close to these aristocratic parties were the
parties of notables, which develop everywhere with the rising power of
the bourgeois. Under the spiritual leadership of the typical intellectual
strata of the Occident, the propertied and cultured circles differentiated
themselves into parties and followed them. These parties were formed partly
according to class interest, partly according to family traditions, and
partly for ideological reasons. Clergymen, teachers, professors, lawyers,
doctors, apothecaries, prosperous farmers, manufacturers--in England the
whole stratum that considered itself as belonging to the class of gentlemen--formed,
at first, occasional associations at most local political clubs. In times
of unrest the petty bourgeoisie raised its voice, and once in a while the
proletariat, if leaders arose who, however, as a rule did not stem from
their midst. In this phase, parties organized as permanent associations
between localities do not yet exist in the open country. Only the parliamentary
delegates create the cohesion; and the local notables are decisive for
the selection of candidates. The election programs originate partly in
the election appeals of the candidates and partly in the meetings of the
notables; or, they originate as resolutions of the parliamentary party.
Leadership of the clubs is an avocation and an honorific pursuit, as demanded
by the occasion.
Where clubs are absent (as is mostly the case),
the quite formless management of politics in normal times lies in the hands
of the few people constantly interested in it. Only the journalist is a
paid professional politician; only the management of the newspaper is a
continuous political organization. Besides the newspaper, there is only
the parliamentary session. The parliamentary delegates and the parliamentary
party leaders know to which local notables one turns if a political action
seems desirable. But permanent associations of the parties exist only in
the large cities with moderate contributions of the members and periodical
conferences and public meetings where the delegate gives account of the
parliamentary activities. The party is alive only during election periods.
The members of parliament are interested in the
possibility of interlocal electoral compromises, in vigorous and unified
programs endorsed by broad circles and in a unified agitation throughout
the country. In general these interests form the driving force of a party
organization which becomes more and more strict. In principle, however,
the nature of a party apparatus as an association of notables remains unchanged.
This is so, even though a network of local party affiliations and agents
is spread over the whole country, including middle-sized cities. A member
of the parliamentary party acts as the leader of the central party office
and maintains constant correspondence with the local organizations. Outside
of the central bureau, paid officials are still absent; thoroughly 'respectable'
people head the local organizations for the sake of the deference which
they enjoy anyway. They form the extra-parliamentary 'notables' who exert
influence alongside the stratum of political notables who happen to sit
in parliament. However, the party correspondence, edited by the party,
increasingly provides intellectual nourishment for the press and for the
local meetings. Regular contributions of the members become indispensable;
a part of these must cover the expenses of headquarters.
Not so long ago most of the German party organizations
were still in this stage of development. In France, the first stage of
party development was, at least in part, still predominant, and the organization
of the members of parliament was quite unstable. In the open country, we
find a small number of local notables and programs drafted by the candidates
or set up for them by their patrons in specific campaigns for office. To
be sure, these platforms constitute more or less local adaptations to the
resolutions and programs of the members of parliament. This system was
only partially punctured. The number of full-time professional politicians
was small, consisting in the main of the elected deputies, the few employees
of headquarters, and the journalists. In France, the system has also included
those job hunters who held 'political office' or, at the moment, strove
for one. Politics was formally and by far predominantly an avocation. The
number of delegates qualifying for ministerial office was also very restricted
and, because of their position as notables, so was the number of election
candidates.
However, the number of those who indirectly had
a stake in the management of politics, especially a material one, was very
large. For all administrative measures of a ministerial department, and
especially all decisions in matters of personnel, were made partly with
a view to their influence upon electoral chances. The realization of each
and every kind of wish was sought through the local delegate's mediation.
For better or for worse the minister had to lend his ear to this delegate,
especially if the delegate belonged to the minister's majority. Hence everybody
strove for such influence. The single deputy controlled the patronage of
office and, in general, any kind of patronage in his election district.
In order to be re-elected the deputy, in turn, maintained connections with
the local notables.
Now then, the most modern forms of party organizations
stand in sharp contrast to this idyllic state in which circles of notables
and, above all, members of parliament rule. These modern forms are the
children of democracy, of mass franchise, of the necessity to woo and organize
the masses, and develop the utmost unity of direction and the strictest
discipline. The rule of notables and guidance by members of parliament
ceases. 'Professional' politicians outside the parliaments take
the organization in hand. They do so either as 'entrepreneurs'--the American
boss and the English election agent are, in fact, such entrepreneurs--or
as officials with a fixed salary. Formally, a fargoing democratization
takes place. The parliamentary party no longer creates the authoritative
programs, and the local notables no longer decide the selection of candidates.
Rather assemblies of the organized party members select the candidates
and delegate members to the assemblies of a higher order. Possibly there
are several such conventions leading up to the national convention of the
party. Naturally power actually rests in the hands of those who, within
the organization, handle the work continuously. Otherwise, power
rests in the hands of those on whom the organization in its processes depends
financially or personally--for instance, on the Maecenases or the directors
of powerful political clubs of interested persons (Tammany Hall). It is
decisive that this whole apparatus of people--characteristically called
a 'machine' in Anglo-Saxon countries or rather those who direct the machine,
keep the members of the parliament in check. They are in a position to
impose their will to a rather far-reaching extent, and that is of special
significance for the selection of the party leader. The man whom the machine
follows now becomes the leader, even over the head of the parliamentary
party. In other words, the creation of such machines signifies the advent
of plebiscitarian democracy.
The party following, above all the party official
and party entrepreneur, naturally expect personal compensation from the
victory of their leader--that is, offices or other advantages. It is decisive
that they expect such advantages from their leader and not merely from
the individual member of parliament. They expect that the demagogic effect
of the leader's personality during the election fight of the party
will increase votes and mandates and thereby power, and, thereby, as far
as possible, will extend opportunities to their followers to find the compensation
for which they hope. Ideally, one of their mainsprings is the satisfaction
of working with loyal personal devotion for a man, and not merely for an
abstract program of a party consisting of mediocrities. In this respect,
the 'charismatic' element of all leadership is at work in the party system.
In very different degrees this system made headway,
although it was in constant, latent struggle with local notables and the
members of parliament who wrangled for influence. This was the case in
the bourgeois parties, first, in the United States, and, then, in the Social
Democratic party, especially of Germany. Constant setbacks occur as soon
as no generally recognized leader exists, and, even when he is found, concessions
of all sorts must be made to the vanity and the personal interest of the
party notables. The machine may also be brought under the domination of
the party officials in whose hands the regular business rests. According
to the view of some Social Democratic circles, their party had succumbed
to this 'bureaucratization.' But 'officials' submit relatively easily to
a leader's personality if it has a strong demagogic appeal. The material
and the ideal interests of the officials are intimately connected with
the effects of party power which are expected from the leader's appeal,
and besides, inwardly it is per se more satisfying to work for a
leader. The ascent of leaders is far more difficult where the notables,
along with the officials, control the party, as is usually the case in
the bourgeois parties. For ideally the notables make 'their way of life'
out of the petty chairmanships or committee memberships they hold. Resentment
against the demagogue as a homo novus, the conviction of the superiority
of political party 'experience' (which, as a matter of fact, actually is
of considerable importance), and the ideological concern for the crumbling
of the old party traditions--these factors determine the conduct of the
notables. They can count on all the traditionalist elements within the
party. Above all, the rural but also the petty bourgeois voter looks for
the name of the notable familiar to him. He distrusts the man who is unknown
to him. However, once this man has become successful, he clings to him
the more unwaveringly. Let us now consider, by some major examples, the
struggle of the two structural forms--of the notables and of the party--and
especially let us consider the ascendancy of the plebiscitarian form as
described by Ostrogorsky.
First England: there until 1868 the party organization
was almost purely an organization of notables. The Tories in the country
found support, for instance, from the Anglican parson, and from the schoolmaster,
and above all from the large landlords of the respective county. The Whigs
found support mostly from such people as the nonconformist preacher (when
there was one), the postmaster, the blacksmith, the tailor, the ropemaker--that
is, from such artisans who could disseminate political influence because
they could chat with people most frequently. In the city the parties differed,
partly according to economics, partly according to religion, and partly
simply according to the party opinions handed down in the families. But
always the notables were the pillars of the political organization.
Above all these arrangements stood Parliament,
the parties with the cabinet, and the 'leader,' who was the chairman of
the council of ministers or the leader of the opposition. This leader had
beside him the 'whip'--the most important professional politician of the
party organization. Patronage of office was vested in the hands of the
'whip'; thus the job hunter had to turn to him and he arranged an understanding
with the deputies of the individual election boroughs. A stratum of professional
politicians gradually began to develop in the boroughs. At first the locally
recruited agents were not paid; they occupied approximately the same position
as our Vertrauensmanner. 5 However, along with them,
a capitalist entrepreneurial type developed in the boroughs. This was the
'election agent,' whose existence was unavoidable under England's modern
legislation which guaranteed fair elections.
This legislation aimed at controlling the campaign
costs of elections and sought to check the power of money by making it
obligatory for the candidate to state the costs of his campaign. For in
England, the candidate, besides straining his voice--far more so than was
formerly the case with us [in Germany]--enjoyed stretching his purse. The
election agent made the candidate pay a lump sum, which usually meant a
good deal for the agent. In the distribution of power in Parliament and
the country between the 'leader' and the party notables, the leader in
England used to hold a very eminent position. This position was based on
the compelling fact of making possible a grand, and thereby steady, political
strategy. Nevertheless the influence of the parliamentary party and of
party notables was still considerable.
That is about what the old party organization
looked like. It was half an affair of notables and half an entrepreneurial
organization with salaried employees. Since 1868, however, the 'caucus'
system developed, first for local elections in Birmingham, then all over
the country. A nonconformist parson and along with him Joseph Chamberlain
brought this system to life. The occasion for this development was the
democratization of the franchise. In order to win the masses it became
necessary to call into being a tremendous apparatus of apparently democratic
associations. An electoral association had to be formed in every city district
to help keep the organization incessantly in motion and to bureaucratize
everything rigidly. Hence, hired and paid officials of the local electoral
committees increased numerically; and, on the whole, perhaps 10 per cent
of the voters were organized in these local committees. The elected party
managers had the right to co-opt others and were the formal bearers of
party politics. The driving force was the local circle, which was, above
all, composed of those interested in municipal politics--from which the
fattest material opportunities always spring. These local circles were
also first to call upon the world of finance. This newly emerging machine,
which was no longer led by members of Parliament, very soon had to struggle
with the previous power-holders, above all, with the 'whip.' Being supported
by locally interested persons, the machine came out of the fight so victoriously
that the whip had to submit and compromise with the machine. The result
was a centralization of all power in the hands of the few and, ultimately,
of the one person who stood at the top of the party. The whole system had
arisen in the Liberal party in connection with Gladstone's ascent to power.
What brought this machine to such swift triumph over the notables was the
fascination of Gladstone's 'grand' demagogy, the firm belief of the masses
in the ethical substance of his policy, and, above all, their belief in
the ethical character of his personality. It soon became obvious that a
Caesarist plebiscitarian element in politics--the dictator of the battlefield
of elections--had appeared on the plain. In 1877 the caucus became active
for the first time in national elections, and with brilliant success, for
the result was Disraeli's fall at the height of his great achievements.
In 1866, the machine was already so completely oriented to the charismatic
personality that when the question of home rule was raised the whole apparatus
from top to bottom did not question whether it actually stood on Gladstone's
ground; it simply, on his word, fell in line with him: they said, Gladstone
right or wrong, we follow him. And thus the machine deserted its own creator,
Chamberlain.
Such machinery requires a considerable personnel.
In England there are about 2,000 persons who live directly off party politics.
To be sure, those who are active in politics purely as job seekers or as
interested persons are far more numerous, especially in municipal politics.
In addition to economic opportunities, for the useful caucus politician,
there are the opportunities to satisfy his vanity. To become 'J.P.' or
even 'M.P.' is, of course, in line with the greatest (and normal) ambition;
and such people, who are of demonstrably good breeding, that is, 'gentlemen,'
attain their goal. The highest goal is, of course, a peerage, especially
for the great financial Maecenases. About 50 per cent of the finances of
the party depend on contributions of donors who remained anonymous.
Now then, what has been the effect of this whole
system? Nowadays the members of Parliament, with the exception of the few
cabinet members (and a few insurgents), are normally nothing better than
well-disciplined 'yes' men. With us, in the Reichstag, one used at least
to take care of one's private correspondence on his desk, thus indicating
that one was active in the weal of the country. Such gestures are not demanded
in England; the member of Parliament must only vote, not commit party treason.
He must appear when the whips call him, and do what the cabinet or the
leader of the opposition orders. The caucus machine in the open country
is almost completely unprincipled if a strong leader exists who has the
machine absolutely in hand. Therewith the plebiscitarian dictator actually
stands above Parliament. He brings the masses behind him by means of the
machine and the members of Parliament are for him merely political spoilsmen
enrolled in his following.
How does the selection of these strong leaders
take place? First, in terms of what ability are they selected? Next to
the qualities of will--decisive all over the world--naturally the force
of demagogic speech is - above all decisive. Its character has changed
since the time speakers like Cobden addressed themselves to the intellect,
and Gladstone who mastered the technique of apparently 'letting sober facts
speak for themselves.' At the present time often purely emotional means
are used--the means the Salvation Army also exploits in order to set the
masses in motion. One may call the existing state of affairs a 'dictatorship
resting on the exploitation of mass emotionality.' Yet, the highly developed
system of committee work in the English Parliament makes it possible and
compelling for every politician who counts on a share in leadership to
cooperate in committee work. All important ministers of recent decades
have this very real and effective work-training as a background. The practice
of committee reports and public criticism of these deliberations is a condition
for training, for really selecting leaders and eliminating mere demagogues.
Thus it is in England. The caucus system there,
however, has been a weak form, compared with the American party organization,
which brought the plebiscitarian principle to an especially early and an
especially pure expression.
According to Washington's idea, America was to
be a commonwealth administered by 'gentlemen.' In his time, in America,
a gentleman was also a landlord, or a man with a college education--this
was the case at first. In the beginning, when parties began to organize,
the members of the House of Representatives claimed to be leaders, just
as in England at the time when notables ruled. The party organization was
quite loose and continued to be until 1824. In some communities, where
modern development first took place, the party machine was in the making
even before the eighteen-twenties. But when Andrew Jackson was first elected
President--the election of the western farmers' candidate --the old traditions
were overthrown. Formal party leadership by leading members of Congress
came to an end soon after 1840, when the great parliamentarians, Calhoun
and Webster, retired from political life because Congress had lost almost
all of its power to the party machine in the open country. That the plebiscitarian
'machine' has developed so early in America is due to the fact that there,
and there alone, the executive--this is what mattered --the chief of office-patronage,
was a President elected by plebiscite. By virtue of the 'separation of
powers' he was almost independent of parliament in his conduct of office.
Hence, as the price of victory, the true booty object of the office-prebend
was held out precisely at the presidential election. Through Andrew Jackson
the 'spoils system' was quite systematically raised to a principle and
the conclusions were drawn.
What does this spoils system, the turning over
of federal offices to the following of the victorious candidate, mean for
the party formations of today? It means that quite unprincipled parties
oppose one another; they are purely organizations of job hunters drafting
their changing platforms according to the chances of vote-grabbing, changing
their colors to a degree which, despite all analogies, is not yet to be
found elsewhere. The parties are simply and absolutely fashioned for the
election campaign that is most important for office patronage: the fight
for the presidency and for the governorships of the separate states. Platforms
and candidates are selected at the national conventions of the parties
without intervention by congressmen. Hence they emerge from party conventions,
the delegates of which are formally, very democratically elected. These
delegates are determined by meetings of other delegates, who, in turn,
owe their mandate to the 'primaries,' the assembling of the direct voters
of the party. In the primaries the delegates are already elected in the
name of the candidate for the nation's leadership. Within the parties the
most embittered fight rages about the question of 'nomination.' After all,
300,000 to 400,000 official appointments lie in the hands of the President,
appointments which are executed by him only with the approval of the senators
from the separate states. Hence the senators are powerful politicians.
By comparison, however, the House of Representatives is, politically, quite
impotent, because patronage of office is removed from it and because the
cabinet members, simply assistants to the President, can conduct office
apart from the confidence or lack of confidence of the people. The President,
who is legitimatized by the people, confronts everybody, even Congress;
this is a result of 'the separation of powers.'
In America, the spoils system, supported in this
fashion, has been technically possible because American culture with its
youth could afford purely dilettante management. With 300,000 to 400,000
such party men who have no qualifications to their credit other than the
fact of having performed good services for their party, this state of affairs
of course could not exist without enormous evils. A corruption and wastefulness
second to none could be tolerated only by a country with as yet unlimited
economic opportunities.
Now then, the boss is the figure who appears in
the picture of this system of the plebiscitarian party machine. Who is
the boss? He is a political capitalist entrepreneur who on his own account
and at his own risk provides votes. He may have established his first relations
as a lawyer or a saloonkeeper or as a proprietor of similar establishments,
or perhaps as a creditor. From here he spins his threads out until he is
able to 'control' a certain number of votes. When he has come this far
he establishes contact with the neighboring bosses, and through zeal, skill,
and above all discretion, he attracts the attention of those who have already
further advanced in the career, and then he climbs. The boss is indispensable
to the organization of the party and the organization is centralized in
his hands. He substantially provides the financial means. How does he get
them ? Well, partly by the contributions of the members, and especially
by taxing the salaries of those officials who came into office through
him and his party. Furthermore, there are bribes and tips. He who wishes
to trespass with impunity one of the many laws needs the boss's connivance
and must pay for it; or else he will get into trouble. But this alone is
not enough to accumulate the necessary capital for political enterprises.
The boss is indispensable as the direct recipient of the money of great
financial magnates, who would not entrust their money for election purposes
to a paid party official, or to anyone else giving public account of his
affairs. The boss, with his judicious discretion in financial matters,
is the natural man for those capitalist circles who finance the election.
The typical boss is an absolutely sober man. He does not seek social honor;
the 'professional' is despised in 'respectable society.' He seeks power
alone, power as a source of money, but also power for power's sake. In
contrast to the English leader, the American boss works in the dark. He
is not heard speaking in public; he suggests to the speakers what they
must say in expedient fashion. He himself, however, keeps silent. As a
rule he accepts no office, except that of senator. For, since the senators,
by virtue of the Constitution, participate in office patronage, the leading
bosses often sit in person in this body. The distribution of offices is
carried out, in the first place, according to services done for the party.
But, also, auctioning offices on financial bids often occurs and there
are certain rates for individual offices; hence, a system of selling offices
exists which, after all, has often been known also to the monarchies, the
church-state included, of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The boss has no firm political 'principles'; he
is completely unprincipled in attitude and asks merely: What will capture
votes? Frequently he is a rather poorly educated man. But as a rule he
leads an inoffensive and correct private life. In his political morals,
however, he naturally adjusts to the average ethical standards of political
conduct, as a great many of us also may have done during the hoarding period
in the field of economic ethics. 6 That as a 'professional'
politician the boss is socially despised does not worry him. That he personally
does not attain high federal offices, and does not wish to do so, has the
frequent advantage that extra-party intellects, thus notables, may come
into candidacy when the bosses believe they will have great appeal value
at the polls. Hence the same old party notables do not run again and again,
as is the case in Germany. Thus the structure of these unprincipled parties
with their socially despised power-holders has aided able men to attain
the presidency--men who with us never would have come to the top. To be
sure, the bosses resist an outsider who might jeopardize their sources
of money and power. Yet in the competitive struggle to win the favor of
the voters, the bosses frequently have had to condescend and accept candidates
known to be opponents of corruption.
Thus there exists a strong capitalist party machine,
strictly and thoroughly organized from top to bottom, and supported by
clubs of extraordinary stability. These clubs, such as Tammany Hall, are
like Knight orders. They seek profits solely through political control,
especially of the municipal government, which is the most important object
of booty. This structure of party life was made possible by the high degree
of democracy in the United States--a 'New Country.' This connection, in
turn, is the basis for the fact that the system is gradually dying out.
America can no longer be governed only by dilettantes. Scarcely fifteen
years ago, when American workers were asked why they allowed themselves
to be governed by politicians whom they admitted they despised, the answer
was: 'We prefer having people in office whom we can spit upon, rather than
a caste of officials who spit upon us, as is the case with you.' This was
the old point of view of American 'democracy.' Even then, the socialists
had entirely different ideas and now the situation is no longer bearable.
The dilettante administration does not suffice and the Civil Service Reform
establishes an ever-increasing number of positions for life with pension
rights. The reform works out in such a way that university-trained officials,
just as incorruptible and quite as capable as our officials, get into office.
Even now about 100,000 offices have ceased being objects of booty to be
turned over after elections. Rather, the offices qualify their holders
for pensions, and are based upon tested qualifications. The spoils system
will thus gradually recede into the background and the nature of party
leadership is then likely to be transformed also but as yet, we do not
know in what way.
In Germany, until now, the decisive conditions
of political management have been in essence as follows:
First, the parliaments have been impotent. The
result has been that no man with the qualities of a leader would enter
Parliament permanently. If one wished to enter Parliament, what could one
achieve there? When a chancellery position was open, one could tell the
administrative chief: 'I have a very able man in my election district who
would be suitable; take him.' And he would have concurred with pleasure;
but that was about all that a German member of Parliament could do to satisfy
his instincts for power--if he possessed any.
To this must be added the tremendous importance
of the trained expert officialdom in Germany. This factor determined the
impotence of Parliament. Our officialdom was second to none in the world.
This importance of the officialdom was accompanied by the fact that the
officials claimed not only official positions but also cabinet positions
for themselves. In the Bavarian state legislature, when the introduction
of parliamentary government was debated last year, it was said that if
members of the legislature were to be placed in cabinet positions talented
people would no longer seek official careers. Moreover, the civil-service
administration systematically escaped such control as is signified by the
English committee discussions. The administration thus made it impossible
for parliaments--with a few exceptions--to train really useful administrative
chiefs from their own ranks.
A third factor is that in Germany, in contrast
to America, we have had parties with principled political views who have
maintained that their members, at least subjectively, represented bona-fide
Weltanschauungen. Now then, the two most important of these parties,
the Catholic Centre Party and the Social Democratic party, have, from their
inceptions, been minority parties and have meant to be minority parties.
The leading circles of the Centre party in the Reich have never concealed
their opposition to parliamentarian democracy, because of fear of remaining
in the minority and thus facing great difficulties in placing their job
hunters in office as they have done by exerting pressure on the government.
The Social Democratic party was a principled minority party and a handicap
to the introduction of parliamentary government because the party did not
wish to stain itself by participating in the existing bourgeois political
order. The fact that both parties dissociated themselves from the parliamentary
system made parliamentary government impossible.
Considering all this, what then became of the
professional politicians in Germany? They have had no power, no responsibility,
and could play only a rather subordinate role as notables. In consequence,
they have been animated anew by the guild instincts, which are typical
everywhere. It has been impossible for a man who was not of their hue to
climb high in the circle of those notables who made their petty positions
their lives. I could mention many names from every party, the Social Democratic
party, of course, not excepted, that spell tragedies of political careers
because the persons had leadership qualities, and precisely because of
these qualities were not tolerated by the notables. All our parties have
taken this course of development and have become guilds of notables. Bebel,
for instance, was still a leader through temperament and purity of character,
however modest his intellect. The fact that he was a martyr, that he never
betrayed confidence in the eyes of the masses, resulted in his having the
masses absolutely behind him. There was no power in the party that could
have seriously challenged him. Such leadership came to an end, after his
death, and the rule of officials began. Trade-union officials, party secretaries,
and journalists came to the top. The instincts of officialdom dominated
the party--a highly respectable officialdom, of rare respectability one
may say, compared to conditions in other countries, especially the often
corruptible trade-union officials in America. But the results of control
by officialdom, which we discussed above, also began in the party.
Since the eighteen-eighties the bourgeois parties
have completely become guilds of notables. To be sure, occasionally the
parties had to draw on extra-party intellects for advertising purposes,
so that they could say, 'We have such and such names.' So far as possible,
they avoided letting these names run for election; only when it was unavoidable
and the person insisted could he run for election. The same spirit prevailed
in Parliament. Our parliamentary parties were and are guilds. Every speech
delivered from the floor of the Reichstag is thoroughly censored in the
party before it is delivered. This is obvious from their unheard-of boredom.
Only he who is summoned to speak can have the word. One can hardly conceive
of a stronger contrast to the English, and also--for quite opposite reasons--the
French usage.
Now, in consequence of the enormous collapse,
which is customarily called the Revolution, perhaps a transformation is
under way. Perhaps--but not for certain. In the beginning there were new
kinds of party apparatuses emerging. First, there were amateur apparatuses.
They are especially often represented by students of the various universities,
who tell a man to whom they ascribe leadership qualities: we want to do
the necessary work for you; carry it out. Secondly, there are apparatuses
of businessmen. It happened that men to whom leadership qualities were
ascribed were approached by people willing to take over the propaganda,
at fixed rates for every vote. If you were to ask me honestly which of
these two apparatuses I think the more reliable, from the purely technical-political
point of view, I believe I would prefer the latter. But both apparatuses
were fast-emerging bubbles, which swiftly vanished again. The existing
apparatuses transformed themselves, but they continued to work. The phenomena
are only symptoms of the fact that new apparatuses would come about if
there were only leaders. But even the technical peculiarity of proportionate
representation precluded their ascendancy. Only a few dictators of the
street crowds arose and fell again. And only the following of a mob dictatorship
is organized in a strictly disciplined fashion: whence the power of these
vanishing minorities.
Let us assume that all this were to change; then,
after what has been said above, it has to be clearly realized that the
plebiscitarian leadership of parties entails the 'soullessness' of the
following, their intellectual proletarianization, one might say. In order
to be a useful apparatus, a machine in the American sense--undisturbed
either by the vanity of notables or pretensions to independent views--the
following of such a leader must obey him blindly. Lincoln's election was
possible only through this character of party organization, and with Gladstone,
as mentioned before, the same happened in the caucus. This is simply the
price paid for guidance by leaders. However, there is only the choice between
leadership democracy with a 'machine' and leaderless democracy, namely,
the rule of professional politicians without a calling, without the inner
charismatic qualities that make a leader, and this means what the party
insurgents in the situation usually designate as 'the rule of the clique.'
For the time being, we in Germany have only the latter. For the future,
the permanence of this situation, at least in the Reich, is primarily facilitated
by the fact that the Bundesrat 7 will rise again and
will of necessity restrict the power of the Reichstag and therewith its
significance as a selective agency of leaders. Moreover, in its present
form, proportional representation is a typical phenomenon of leaderless
democracy. This is the case not only because it facilitates the horse-trading
of the notables for placement on the ticket, but also because in the future
it will give organized interest groups the possibility of compelling parties
to include their officials in the list of candidates, thus creating an
unpolitical Parliament in which genuine leadership finds no place. Only
the President of the Reich could become the safety-valve of the demand
for leadership if he were elected in a plebiscitarian way and not by Parliament.
Leadership on the basis of proved work could emerge and selection could
take place, especially if, in great municipalities, the plebiscitarian
city-manager were to appear on the scene with the right to organize his
bureaus independently. Such is the case in the U.S.A. whenever one wishes
to tackle corruption seriously. It requires a party organization fashioned
for such elections. But the very petty-bourgeois hostility of all parties
to leaders, the Social Democratic party certainly included, leaves the
future formation of parties and all these chances still completely in the
dark.
Therefore, today, one cannot yet see in any way
how the management of politics as a 'vocation' will shape itself. Even
less can one see along what avenue opportunities are opening to which political
talents can be put for satisfactory political tasks. He who by his material
circumstances is compelled to live 'off' politics will almost always have
to consider the alternative positions of the journalist or the party official
as the typical direct avenues. Or, he must consider a position as representative
of interest groups--such as a trade union, a chamber of commerce, a farm
bureau, 8 a craft association, 9 a labor board, an
employer's association, et cetera, or else a suitable municipal position.
Nothing more than this can be said about this external aspect: in common
with the journalist, the party official bears the odium of being declasse.
'Wage writer' or 'wage speaker' will unfortunately always resound in his
ears, even though the words remain unexpressed. He who is inwardly defenseless
and unable to find the proper answer for himself had better stay away from
this career. For in any case, besides grave temptations, it is an avenue
that may constantly lead to disappointments. Now then, what inner enjoyments
can this career offer and what personal conditions are presupposed for
one who enters this avenue?
Well, first of all the career of politics grants
a feeling of power. The knowledge of influencing men, of participating
in power over them, and above all, the feeling of holding in one's hands
a nerve fiber of historically important events can elevate the professional
politician above everyday routine even when he is placed in formally modest
positions. But now the question for him is: Through what qualities can
I hope to do justice to this power (however narrowly circumscribed it may
be in the individual case) ? How can he hope to do justice to the responsibility
that power imposes upon him? With this we enter the field of ethical questions,
for that is where the problem belongs: What kind of a man must one be if
he is to be allowed to put his hand on the wheel of history?
One can say that three pre-eminent qualities are
decisive for the politician: passion, a feeling of responsibility, and
a sense of proportion.
This means passion in the sense of matter-of-factness,
of passionate devotion to a 'cause,' to the god or demon who is its overlord.
It is not passion in the sense of that inner bearing which my late friend,
Georg Simmel, used to designate as 'sterile excitation,' and which was
peculiar especially to a certain type of Russian intellectual (by no means
all of them!). It is an excitation that plays so great a part with our
intellectuals in this carnival we decorate with the proud name of 'revolution.'
It is a 'romanticism of the intellectually interesting,' running into emptiness
devoid of all feeling of objective responsibility.
To be sure, mere passion, however genuinely felt,
is not enough. It does not make a politician, unless passion as devotion
to a 'cause' also makes responsibility to this cause the guiding star of
action. And for this, a sense of proportion is needed. This is the decisive
psychological quality of the politician: his ability to let realities work
upon him with inner concentration and calmness. Hence his distance
to things and men. 'Lack of distance' per se is one of the deadly
sins of every politician. It is one of those qualities the breeding of
which will condemn the progeny of our intellectuals to political incapacity.
For the problem is simply how can warm passion and a cool sense of proportion
be forged together in one and the same soul? Politics is made with the
head, not with other parts of the body or soul. And yet devotion to politics,
if it is not to be frivolous intellectual play but rather genuinely human
conduct, can be born and nourished from passion alone. However, that firm
taming of the soul, which distinguishes the passionate politician and differentiates
him from the 'sterilely excited' and mere political dilettante, is possible
only through habituation to detachment in every sense of the word. The
'strength' of a political 'personality' means, in the first place, the
possession of these qualities of passion, responsibility, and proportion.
Therefore, daily and hourly, the politician inwardly
has to overcome a quite trivial and all-too-human enemy: a quite vulgar
vanity, the deadly enemy of all matter of-fact devotion to a cause, and
of all distance, in this case, of distance towards one's self.
Vanity is a very widespread quality and perhaps
nobody is entirely free from it. In academic and scholarly circles, vanity
is a sort of occupational disease, but precisely with the scholar, vanity--however
disagreeably it may express itself--is relatively harmless; in the sense
that as a rule it does not disturb scientific enterprise. With the politician
the case is quite different. He works with the striving for power as an
unavoidable means. Therefore, 'power instinct,' as is usually said, belongs
indeed to his normal qualities. The sin against the lofty spirit of his
vocation, however, begins where this striving for power ceases to be objective
and becomes purely personal self-intoxication, instead of exclusively entering
the service of 'the cause.' For ultimately there are only two kinds of
deadly sins in the field of politics: lack of objectivity and--often but
not always identical with it--irresponsibility. Vanity, the need personally
to stand in the foreground as clearly as possible, strongly tempts the
politician to commit one or both of these sins. This is more truly the
case as the demagogue is compelled to count upon 'effect.' He therefore
is constantly in danger of becoming an actor as well as taking lightly
the responsibility for the outcome of his actions and of being concerned
merely with the 'impression' he makes. His lack of objectivity tempts him
to strive for the glamorous semblance of power rather than for actual power.
His irresponsibility, however, suggests that he enjoy power merely for
power's sake without a substantive purpose. Although, or rather just because,
power is the unavoidable means, and striving for power is one of the driving
forces of all politics, there is no more harmful distortion of political
force than the parvenu-like braggart with power, and the vain self-reflection
in the feeling of power, and in general every worship of power per se.
The mere 'power politician' may get strong effects, but actually his work
leads nowhere and is senseless. (Among us, too, an ardently promoted cult
seeks to glorify him.) In this, the critics of 'power politics' are absolutely
right. From the sudden inner collapse of typical representatives of this
mentality, we can see what inner weakness and impotence hides behind this
boastful but entirely empty gesture. It is a product of a shoddy and superficially
blase attitude towards the meaning of human conduct; and it has no relation
whatsoever to the knowledge of tragedy with which all action, but especially
political action, is truly interwoven.
The final result of political action often, no,
even regularly, stands in completely inadequate and often even paradoxical
relation to its original meaning. This is fundamental to all history, a
point not to be proved in detail here. But because of this fact, the serving
of a cause must not be absent if action is to have inner strength. Exactly
what the cause, in the service of which the politician strives for power
and uses power, looks like is a matter of faith. The politician may serve
national, humanitarian, social, ethical, cultural, worldly, or religious
ends. The politician may be sustained by a strong belief in 'progress'--no
matter in which sense--or he may coolly reject this kind of belief. He
may claim to stand in the service of an 'idea' or, rejecting this in principle,
he may want to serve external ends of everyday life. However, some kind
of faith must always exist. Otherwise, it is absolutely true that the curse
of the creature's worthlessness overshadows even the externally strongest
political successes.
With the statement above we are already engaged
in discussing the last problem that concerns us tonight: the ethos
of politics as a 'cause.' What calling can politics fulfil quite independently
of its goals within the total ethical economy of human conduct--which is,
so to speak, the ethical locus where politics is at home? Here, to be sure,
ultimate Weltanschauungen clash, world views among which in the
end one has to make a choice. Let us resolutely tackle this problem, which
recently has been opened again, in my view in a very wrong way.
But first, let us free ourselves from a quite
trivial falsification: namely, that ethics may first appear in a morally
highly compromised role. Let us consider examples. Rarely will you find
that a man whose love turns from one woman to another feels no need to
legitimate this before himself by saying: she was not worthy of my love,
or, she has disappointed me, or whatever other like 'reasons' exist. This
is an attitude that, with a profound lack of chivalry, adds a fancied 'legitimacy'
to the plain fact that he no longer loves her and that the woman has to
bear it. By virtue of this 'legitimation,' the man claims a right for himself
and besides causing the misfortune seeks to put her in the wrong. The successful
amatory competitor proceeds exactly in the same way: namely, the opponent
must be less worthy, otherwise he would not have lost out. It is no different,
of course, if after a victorious war the victor in undignified self-righteousness
claims, 'I have won because I was right.' Or, if somebody under the frightfulness
of war collapses psychologically, and instead of simply saying it was just
too much, he feels the need of legitimizing his war weariness to himself
by substituting the feeling, 'I could not bear it because I had to fight
for a morally bad cause.' And likewise with the defeated in war. Instead
of searching like old women for the 'guilty one' after the war--in a situation
in which the structure of society produced the war--everyone with a manly
and controlled attitude would tell the enemy, 'We lost the war. You have
won it. That is now all over. Now let us discuss what conclusions must
be drawn according to the objective interests that came into play
and what is the main thing in view of the responsibility towards the future
which above all burdens the victor.' Anything else is undignified and will
become a boomerang. A nation forgives if its interests have been damaged,
but no nation forgives if its honor has been offended, especially by a
bigoted self-righteousness. Every new document that comes to light after
decades revives the undignified lamentations, the hatred and scorn, instead
of allowing the war at its end to be buried, at least morally. This is
possible only through objectivity and chivalry and above all only through
dignity. But never is it possible through an 'ethic,' which in truth signifies
a lack of dignity on both sides. Instead of being concerned about what
the politician is interested in, the future and the responsibility towards
the future, this ethic is concerned about politically sterile questions
of past guilt, which are not to be settled politically. To act in this
way is politically guilty, if such guilt exists at all. And it overlooks
the unavoidable falsification of the whole problem, through very material
interests: namely, the victor's interest in the greatest possible moral
and material gain; the hopes of the defeated to trade in advantages through
confessions of guilt. If anything is 'vulgar,' then, this is, and it is
the result of this fashion of exploiting 'ethics' as a means of 'being
in the right.'
Now then, what relations do ethics and politics
actually have? Have the two nothing whatever to do with one another, as
has occasionally been said? Or, is the reverse true: that the ethic of
political conduct is identical with that of any other conduct ? Occasionally
an exclusive choice has been believed to exist between the two propositions--either
the one or the other proposition must be correct. But is it true that any
ethic of the world could establish commandments of identical content for
erotic, business, familial, and official relations; for the relations to
one's wife, to the greengrocer, the son, the competitor, the friend, the
defendant? Should it really matter so little for the ethical demands on
politics that politics operates with very special means, namely, power
backed up by violence? Do we not see that the Bolshevik and the
Spartacist ideologists bring about exactly the same results as any militaristic
dictator just because they use this political means? In what but the persons
of the power-holders and their dilettantism does the rule of the workers'
and soldiers' councils differ from the rule of any power-holder of the
old regime? In what way does the polemic of most representatives of the
presumably new ethic differ from that of the opponents which they criticized,
or the ethic of any other demagogues ? In their noble intention, people
will say. Good! But it is the means about which we speak here, and the
adversaries, in complete subjective sincerity, claim, in the very same
way, that their ultimate intentions are of lofty character. 'All they that
take the sword shall perish with the sword' and fighting is everywhere
fighting. Hence, the ethic of the Sermon on the Mount.
By the Sermon on the Mount, we mean the absolute
ethic of the gospel, which is a more serious matter than those who are
fond of quoting these commandments today believe. This ethic is no joking
matter. The same holds for this ethic as has been said of causality in
science: it is not a cab, which one can have stopped at one's pleasure;
it is all or nothing. This is precisely the meaning of the gospel, if trivialities
are not to result. Hence, for instance, it was said of the wealthy young
man, 'He went away sorrowful: for he had great possessions.' The evangelist
commandment, however, is unconditional and unambiguous: give what thou
hast--absolutely everything. The politician will say that this is a socially
senseless imposition as long as it is not carried out everywhere. Thus
the politician upholds taxation, confiscatory taxation, out-right confiscation;
in a word, compulsion and regulation for all. The ethical commandment,
however, is not at all concerned about that, and this unconcern is its
essence. Or, take the example, 'turn the other cheek': This command is
unconditional and does not question the source of the other's authority
to strike. Except for a saint it is an ethic of indignity. This is it:
one must be saintly in everything; at least in intention, one must live
like Jesus, the apostles, St. Francis, and their like. Then this
ethic makes sense and expresses a kind of dignity; otherwise it does not.
For if it is said, in line with the acosmic ethic of love, 'Resist not
him that is evil with force,' for the politician the reverse proposition
holds, 'thou shalt resist evil by force,' or else you are responsible
for the evil winning out. He who wishes to follow the ethic of the gospel
should abstain from strikes, for strikes mean compulsion; he may join the
company unions. Above all things, he should not talk of 'revolution.' After
all, the ethic of the gospel does not wish to teach that civil war is the
only legitimate war. The pacifist who follows the gospel will refuse to
bear arms or will throw them down; in Germany this was the recommended
ethical duty to end the war and therewith all wars. The politician would
say the only sure means to discredit the war for all foreseeable time would
have been a status quo peace. Then the nations would have questioned,
what was this war for? And then the war would have been argued ad absurdum,
which is now impossible. For the victors, at least for part of them, the
war will have been politically profitable. And the responsibility for this
rests on behavior that made all resistance impossible for us. Now, as a
result of the ethics of absolutism, when the period of exhaustion will
have passed, the peace will be discredited, not the war.
Finally, let us consider the duty of truthfulness.
For the absolute ethic it holds unconditionally. Hence the conclusion was
reached to publish all documents, especially those placing blame on one's
own country. On the basis of these one-sided publications the confessions
of guilt followed--and they were one-sided, unconditional, and without
regard to consequences. The politician will find that as a result truth
will not be furthered but certainly obscured through abuse and unleashing
of passion; only an all-round methodical investigation by non-partisans
could bear fruit; any other procedure may have consequences for a nation
that cannot be remedied for decades. But the absolute ethic just does not
ask for 'consequences.' That is the decisive point.
We must be clear about the fact that all ethically
oriented conduct may be guided by one of two fundamentally differing and
irreconcilably opposed maxims: conduct can be oriented to an 'ethic of
ultimate ends' or to an 'ethic of responsibility.' This is not to say that
an ethic of ultimate ends is identical with irresponsibility, or that an
ethic of responsibility is identical with unprincipled opportunism. Naturally
nobody says that. However, there is an abysmal contrast between conduct
that follows the maxim of an ethic of ultimate ends--that is, in religious
terms, 'The Christian does rightly and leaves the results with the Lord'--and
conduct that follows the maxim of an ethic of responsibility, in which
case one has to give an account of the foreseeable results of one's action.
You may demonstrate to a convinced syndicalist,
believing in an ethic of ultimate ends, that his action will result in
increasing the opportunities of reaction, in increasing the oppression
of his class, and obstructing its ascent--and you will not make the slightest
impression upon him. If an action of good intent leads to bad results,
then, in the actor's eyes, not he but the world, or the stupidity of other
men, or God's will who made them thus, is responsible for the evil. However
a man who believes in an ethic of responsibility takes account of precisely
the average deficiencies of people; as Fichte has correctly said, he does
not even have the right to presuppose their goodness and perfection. He
does not feel in a position to burden others with the results of his own
actions so far as he was able to foresee them; he will say: these results
are ascribed to my action. The believer in an ethic of ultimate ends feels
'responsible' only for seeing to it that the flame of pure intentions is
not quelched: for example, the flame of protesting against the injustice
of the social order. To rekindle the flame ever anew is the purpose of
his quite irrational deeds, judged in view of their possible success. They
are acts that can and shall have only exemplary value.
But even herewith the problem is not yet exhausted.
No ethics in the world can dodge the fact that in numerous instances the
attainment of 'good' ends is bound to the fact that one must be willing
to pay the price of using morally dubious means or at least dangerous ones
--and faci |